In a recent study of several hundred Chinese companies, a colleague and I put the question to the test. We found that a CSR disclosure lowers a businessโs dependence on current customers by 2.1%.
Thatโs welcome news for businesses. It means those additional sales are coming from new customers, who are indeed impressed by the companyโs CSR efforts.
But the findings werenโt all positive.
To sell more products, companies generally need to buy more supplies. So a logical follow-up question is: Does a companyโs CSR disclosure lead it to source purchases from new suppliers?
In fact, we found the opposite. Companies that released CSR disclosures seemed to scare away new suppliers. This is probably because suppliers often bear the costs when a company chooses to prioritize social responsibility.
Becoming dependent on suppliers comes at a cost to businesses. When suppliers know a company depends on them, they tend to demand payment in cash rather than credit. That can hurt a company, because it now has less cash for investments.
So while CSR reports impress customers, they appear to antagonize suppliers โ and that comes at a price.
Why it matters
Prior research has shown that CSR disclosures can boost sales, but itโs long been unclear whether these additional sales are sourced from old customers or newly acquired ones. Our work brings clarity that businesses can use in making decisions.
The findings are also of interest to lawmakers, regulators and corporate responsibility advocates who are debating making CSR reports mandatory.
The U.S. doesnโt require businesses to release CSR reports, but some countries do. One is China, which in 2008 mandated that all public companies submit annual CSR reports starting in 2009. This created the conditions for the nearly natural experiment we conducted.
Interestingly, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has reportedly considered making some form of corporate social responsibility reporting mandatory. In the absence of requirements, many American corporations will continue to voluntarily report their CSR.
In other words, the need for empirical evidence on the cost and benefits of CSR disclosure is greater than ever.
Whatโs next
The increasing incidence of extreme weather events and weather-related fatalities and injuries has piqued my interest in environmental responsibility. I have two ongoing research projects.
First, Iโm using a companyโs public disclosures to measure its environmental risks and the activities it has undertaken to mitigate them. Second, I am researching how CEO incentives shape a companyโs environmental disclosure, activities and spending โ or the lack thereof.
The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

Vivek Astvansh does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Source: The Conversation