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Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach

There are many calls for banks to expand their contribution to the transition towards a sustainable world by sponsoring initiatives that promote the United National Sustainable Development Goals. This role is more materialized in developing countries as banks are the key source of funding; thus, the...

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Main Author: ELKLAWY, Mohamed
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author ELKLAWY, Mohamed
author_browse ELKLAWY, Mohamed
author_facet ELKLAWY, Mohamed
author_sort ELKLAWY, Mohamed
collection Thesis
description There are many calls for banks to expand their contribution to the transition towards a sustainable world by sponsoring initiatives that promote the United National Sustainable Development Goals. This role is more materialized in developing countries as banks are the key source of funding; thus, they have the power of money to mutate the DNA of businesses to operate responsibly with respect to the surrounding environment and society. Various studies consider the reflection of adopting sustainable approaches by banks, though focusing on developed countries who took the initiative to lead this change. As the banks in developing countries try to catch this up, there is a question about how this endeavor reflects on their return and risk profiles. This study empirically shows that unlike banks in Europe, North America, and Asia, banks in other less-developed areas may exhibit lower returns as they expand their focus on the transition to sustainability rather than asset growth. On the other hand, the study also reveals for those banks in less-developed contexts, there is no significant relationship between banks’ sustainable performance and their resilience to distress. These results help to portray an inclusive view of the sustainability-focused strategies in various frameworks where high-income nations are expected to expand their support for poorer countries in order to alleviate their cost of transition especially as the climate change and resources depletion’s responsibility is not evenly shared. Also, the study helps policy makers to consider the importance of the prudential supervisory framework to promote sustainability though in relevance to the country’s economic and regulatory maturity. From another perspective, the results are useful for banks drawing their strategies to consider the reflection of their engagement in the environmental and social preservation practices within various economic contexts.
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id oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3288
institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:54.296Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher AUC Knowledge Fountain
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3288 Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach ELKLAWY, Mohamed There are many calls for banks to expand their contribution to the transition towards a sustainable world by sponsoring initiatives that promote the United National Sustainable Development Goals. This role is more materialized in developing countries as banks are the key source of funding; thus, they have the power of money to mutate the DNA of businesses to operate responsibly with respect to the surrounding environment and society. Various studies consider the reflection of adopting sustainable approaches by banks, though focusing on developed countries who took the initiative to lead this change. As the banks in developing countries try to catch this up, there is a question about how this endeavor reflects on their return and risk profiles. This study empirically shows that unlike banks in Europe, North America, and Asia, banks in other less-developed areas may exhibit lower returns as they expand their focus on the transition to sustainability rather than asset growth. On the other hand, the study also reveals for those banks in less-developed contexts, there is no significant relationship between banks’ sustainable performance and their resilience to distress. These results help to portray an inclusive view of the sustainability-focused strategies in various frameworks where high-income nations are expected to expand their support for poorer countries in order to alleviate their cost of transition especially as the climate change and resources depletion’s responsibility is not evenly shared. Also, the study helps policy makers to consider the importance of the prudential supervisory framework to promote sustainability though in relevance to the country’s economic and regulatory maturity. From another perspective, the results are useful for banks drawing their strategies to consider the reflection of their engagement in the environmental and social preservation practices within various economic contexts. 2024-02-28T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2244 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3288/viewcontent/mohamed_elklawy_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain ESG Environmental Social Governance Risk AI Banks Finance and Financial Management
spellingShingle ESG Environmental Social Governance Risk AI Banks
Finance and Financial Management
ELKLAWY, Mohamed
Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach
title Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach
title_full Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach
title_fullStr Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach
title_full_unstemmed Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach
title_short Is ESG a Determinant of Banks’ resilience and Growth Everywhere? A Response from an AI-Aided Approach
title_sort is esg a determinant of banks resilience and growth everywhere a response from an ai aided approach
topic ESG Environmental Social Governance Risk AI Banks
Finance and Financial Management
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2244
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3288/viewcontent/mohamed_elklawy_thesis.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT elklawymohamed isesgadeterminantofbanksresilienceandgrowtheverywherearesponsefromanaiaidedapproach