利益相关者的政治意识形态、商业目的信念与对CEO行动主义的回应:引入一个不对称模型

Stakeholder Political Ideology, Purpose of Business Beliefs, and Responses to CEO Activism: Introducing an Asymmetry Model

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2025
被引 1
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究发现,自由派和保守派利益相关者对CEO在政治议题上表态的反应不对称:自由派更支持与自己一致的立场,而保守派甚至偏好不表态而非一致立场,这挑战了政治对称性假设。

Abstract

CEO activism refers to public stance-taking by CEOs on politically polarized issues. The prevailing view is that liberal and conservative stakeholders respond symmetrically to CEO activism, like how liberal and conservative voters have been found to respond to ideological causes. Specifically, both groups are thought to similarly favor ideologically aligned CEO activism, and disfavor ideologically misaligned CEO activism and non-activism. We question the assumption that liberal–conservative symmetry in national politics translates to stakeholder preferences. Extending research indicating that liberals scrutinize the perceived benefits and costs that businesses impose on society more than conservatives due to differences in purpose of business beliefs, we theorize that liberal stakeholders respond more favorably to aligned activism, and less favorably to misaligned activism and non-activism. We corroborate our ideological asymmetry model in three preregistered experiments examining job seekers and consumers. Crucially, conservatives, unlike liberals, prefer non-activism over aligned activism, even when conservatives feel strongly about the underlying issue. Experimentally reducing the liberal–conservative gap on purpose of business beliefs reduces these asymmetries. Our work challenges the assumption that liberal–conservative symmetry in politics translates to business; sheds new light on the strategic implications of CEO activism; and may explain the rarity of conservative CEO activism.

CEO行动主义政治意识形态利益相关者企业社会责任