供应链竞争中的企业社会责任问题:绿色洗白应受监管吗?

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Issues in Supply Chain Competition: Should Greenwashing Be Regulated?

DECISION SCIENCES · 2018
被引 146 · 同刊同年前 6%
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

从经济学角度分析绿色洗白监管对市场的影响,发现监管不一定增加绿色产品的正环境外部性,而允许绿色洗白可能激励企业真正绿色化,前提是市场中有知情消费者。

Abstract

ABSTRACT Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has been treated as an instrument to differentiate firms in a competitive market. However, due to the credence good nature of CSR, when considering product quality dimension, firms can only signal their quality through advertising or labeling. These signaling mechanisms may be exploited by some dishonest firms who claim to be green (“greenwashing”). Many critics argue that greenwashing needs to be regulated because it deceives the market and discourages firms from going genuinely green. In this article, instead of focusing on the ethical side of this issue, we try to explore the market outcome from an economic perspective. We show that regulating greenwashing may not necessarily increase the positive environmental externality of green products. In particular, even if greenwashing is regulated, firms may not act green when the additional CSR cost is too high or when the corresponding CSR issue is not as important. On the other hand, we find that allowing greenwashing may incentivize some firms to go genuinely green as long as there are some informed customers in the market.

企业社会责任供应链竞争绿色洗白信号传递环境外部性