What you see is not what you get: ESG scores and greenwashing risk
University of Augsburg · University of St.Gallen · +3 more institutions
Abstract
This paper shows that ESG scores capture a company’s greenwashing behavior. Greenwashing accusations are most prevalent among large companies with high ESG scores. We empirically employ a novel theoretical model that distinguishes between the communication of a company’s environmental efforts (apparent environmental performance) and its actual environmental impact (real environmental performance). The correlation of the apparent (real) environmental performance with ESG scores is significantly positive (negative). Therefore, ESG scores are unsuitable for measuring real environmental impact. Thus, investors focusing on high ESG-rated companies may unknowingly increase their greenwashing risk exposure, and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 121.85
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
5- MCManuel C. Kathan
University of Augsburg, University of St.Gallen, Swiss Finance Institute
- SUSebastian UtzCorresponding
University of Augsburg
- GDGregor Dorfleitner
University of Augsburg, Hanken School of Economics, University of Regensburg
- JEJens Eckberg
University of Regensburg
- LCLea Chmel
University of Augsburg
Topics & keywords
- Greenwashing
- Business
- Actuarial science
- Economics
- Political science
- Corporate social responsibility
- Public relations
- Zero hunger