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Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions

This research work investigates the influence of the social factor of ESG on firm performance for firms in jurisdictions with socio-economic challenges versus firms in developed jurisdictions. For this research work, South Africa was used as a proxy for a jurisdiction with socio-economic challenges...

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Main Author: Mofokeng, Lebohang
Other Authors: de Jager, Phillip
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mofokeng, Lebohang
author2 de Jager, Phillip
author_browse Mofokeng, Lebohang
de Jager, Phillip
author_facet de Jager, Phillip
Mofokeng, Lebohang
author_sort Mofokeng, Lebohang
collection Thesis
description This research work investigates the influence of the social factor of ESG on firm performance for firms in jurisdictions with socio-economic challenges versus firms in developed jurisdictions. For this research work, South Africa was used as a proxy for a jurisdiction with socio-economic challenges and Australia was used as a proxy for a developed market. Given socio-economic differences, the expectation was that the social factor is more important for South African firms than Australian firms. The corresponding financial and ESG data was collected from 2010 to 2019. The research work is quantitative, with regression models used to undertake the comparative study. The key dependent variables used for this research are share price performance and return on equity, and the primary independent variable of interest is the social factor of ESG. Fundamental and ESG data used for this research came from Refinitive with supplements from Bloomberg and firms' annual financial statements. The study found that the social factor has a directionally negative relationship with share price performance for South African firms. However, the relationship between the social factor and ROE was found to be positive for South African firms. Secondly, the study found that, by comparing South African firms and Australian firms, the social factor has a directionally more positive relationship with return on equity for South African firms compared with their Australian counterparts. A directionally similar result was obtained for share price performance: South African firms exhibited a less negative effect on share price performance than Australian firms. For South African firms, the study also found that the social factor has a directionally more positive relationship with return on equity than the governance factor. However, the environmental factor exhibited a more positive relationship with return on equity than the social factor. It is recommended that further research is conducted using ESG data from other service providers, given the high level of ESG scoring disagreements amongst data providers, as observed by academic research. As ESG gets more prevalent, an interesting study would be to run a similar analysis using unlisted businesses to capture the entire SA business ecosystem. This research study will contribute toward ESG research on South African firms. The study may also have indirect political and social implications in that if there is a prevalent relevance of the social factor, more firms may be incentivised to invest more in host communities' social development and welfare. The study also adds to the relevance and importance of social factor consideration when constructing investor portfolios.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:05.164Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Finance and Tax
publisherStr Department of Finance and Tax
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39655 Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions Mofokeng, Lebohang de Jager, Phillip Finance and Tax This research work investigates the influence of the social factor of ESG on firm performance for firms in jurisdictions with socio-economic challenges versus firms in developed jurisdictions. For this research work, South Africa was used as a proxy for a jurisdiction with socio-economic challenges and Australia was used as a proxy for a developed market. Given socio-economic differences, the expectation was that the social factor is more important for South African firms than Australian firms. The corresponding financial and ESG data was collected from 2010 to 2019. The research work is quantitative, with regression models used to undertake the comparative study. The key dependent variables used for this research are share price performance and return on equity, and the primary independent variable of interest is the social factor of ESG. Fundamental and ESG data used for this research came from Refinitive with supplements from Bloomberg and firms' annual financial statements. The study found that the social factor has a directionally negative relationship with share price performance for South African firms. However, the relationship between the social factor and ROE was found to be positive for South African firms. Secondly, the study found that, by comparing South African firms and Australian firms, the social factor has a directionally more positive relationship with return on equity for South African firms compared with their Australian counterparts. A directionally similar result was obtained for share price performance: South African firms exhibited a less negative effect on share price performance than Australian firms. For South African firms, the study also found that the social factor has a directionally more positive relationship with return on equity than the governance factor. However, the environmental factor exhibited a more positive relationship with return on equity than the social factor. It is recommended that further research is conducted using ESG data from other service providers, given the high level of ESG scoring disagreements amongst data providers, as observed by academic research. As ESG gets more prevalent, an interesting study would be to run a similar analysis using unlisted businesses to capture the entire SA business ecosystem. This research study will contribute toward ESG research on South African firms. The study may also have indirect political and social implications in that if there is a prevalent relevance of the social factor, more firms may be incentivised to invest more in host communities' social development and welfare. The study also adds to the relevance and importance of social factor consideration when constructing investor portfolios. 2024-05-20T11:38:42Z 2024-05-20T11:38:42Z 2023 2024-05-17T12:40:57Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39655 Eng application/pdf Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Finance and Tax
Mofokeng, Lebohang
Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions
title_full Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions
title_fullStr Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions
title_short Investigating the relationship between ESG factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions
title_sort investigating the relationship between esg factors and firm performance in socially challenged jurisdictions relative to developed jurisdictions
topic Finance and Tax
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39655
work_keys_str_mv AT mofokenglebohang investigatingtherelationshipbetweenesgfactorsandfirmperformanceinsociallychallengedjurisdictionsrelativetodevelopedjurisdictions