대구한의대학교 향산도서관

상세정보

부가기능

"Some Rise by Sin, and Some by Virtue Fall": Empirical Articles on Socially Responsible Investing in Financial Markets

상세 프로파일

상세정보
자료유형학위논문
서명/저자사항"Some Rise by Sin, and Some by Virtue Fall": Empirical Articles on Socially Responsible Investing in Financial Markets.
개인저자Nath, Saheli.
단체저자명Northwestern University. Management and Organizations and Sociology.
발행사항[S.l.]: Northwestern University., 2019.
발행사항Ann Arbor: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2019.
형태사항162 p.
기본자료 저록Dissertations Abstracts International 81-05A.
Dissertation Abstract International
ISBN9781088327852
학위논문주기Thesis (Ph.D.)--Northwestern University, 2019.
일반주기 Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 81-05, Section: A.
Advisor: King, Brayden.
이용제한사항This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.This item must not be added to any third party search indexes.
요약This dissertation project uses both quantitative and qualitative analytical approaches to examine the dynamics of responsible investing in financial markets. The first chapter investigates how the institutionalization of responsible investing as a business strategy affects category claims made by mutual funds. The study finds that as the divestment movement in the late twentieth century became institutionalized in the US financial markets by being incorporated as a business strategy into more mainstream investment vehicles like mutual funds and pension funds, the related terminology, definitions, strategies and practices associated with ethical investing became more diversified and ambiguous due to fuzzy boundaries, duality of virtue inherent in the portfolio targets, and exercise of discretion by portfolio managers. Notwithstanding recent efforts at standardization of metrics measuring portfolio performance on responsible investment, on average socially responsible investment funds differ significantly from conventional funds in terms of ESG-related outcomes. Further, there is still significant heterogeneity among SRI funds themselves. As increased heterogeneity led to greater ambiguity about who belongs to a category, fund managers adopted distinct measures-based, values-based and expertise-based approaches to resolve ambiguity.The second chapter investigates cross-country variation in responsible investing practices using both quantitative and qualitative approaches. The study finds partial support for the claim that pension funds and mutual funds operating in countries where people have more freedom of expression and greater control of corruption will perform better on environmental, social and governance dimensions compared to countries where people have relatively less freedom of expression and less institutional control of corruption. Surprisingly, this article does not find support for the hypothesis that when asset owners and investment managers perceive high regulatory quality and government effectiveness in their country, they will pay greater attention to responsible investment, as measured by the number of organizational employees dedicated specifically to responsible investment. Through a qualitative analysis of the responses explaining employment decisions, the study uncovered that organizations can undertake either an integrative or specialized or hybrid approach to employment, which affects the number of reported staff dedicated to responsible investment.The third chapter uses Hirschman's "exit, voice, and loyalty" framework to review the extant literature and examine exit by ethical funds, barriers to exit, modes and strategies of exit and consequences of exit following a corporate transgression. It employed a case study approach to examine whether socially responsible investment funds that hold equity in a transgressing firm react more negatively to severe ESG violations compared to conventional investment funds. Using the Wells Fargo scandal as our focal point, the results indicated that SRI-status of the mutual fund did not affect the decision to fully or partially "exit" from the fund's equity position in Wells Fargo. Public institutional investors like government agencies that represent the welfare logic of the state were more likely to take up the activist role by imposing discipline on Wells Fargo through sanctions and temporary exit. The study has important implications for the use full or partial exit as a form of shareholder activism to impose discipline on the transgressing firm.
일반주제명Management.
언어영어
바로가기URL : 이 자료의 원문은 한국교육학술정보원에서 제공합니다.

서평(리뷰)

  • 서평(리뷰)

태그

  • 태그

나의 태그

나의 태그 (0)

모든 이용자 태그

모든 이용자 태그 (0) 태그 목록형 보기 태그 구름형 보기
 
로그인폼