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“Doing Well While Doing Good” Revisited: A Study of Socially Responsible Firms' Short‐Term versus Long‐term Performance

Todd Shank (Associate Professor of Finance, College of Business, USF St. Petersburg, 140 Seventh Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701‐5016)
Daryl Manullang (Instructor of Finance)
Ron Hill (Bank of America Professor of Corporate Social Responsibility and Founding Dean, College of Business, University of South Florida St. Petersburg)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 1 August 2005

1813

Abstract

This article reexamines the “doing well while doing good” debate within the financial management literature, using comparisons among socially responsible mutual funds (SRMF(, the NYSE Composite Index, and a portfolio made up of firms most valued by SRMF managers )MostSRF(. The performance of MostSRF did no better or no worse than the over all market or SRMF in three to five year comparisons. However, results from the ten‐year performance comparison refute earlier studies and indicate that the market prices social responsibility characteristics in the long run. Given MostSRF out performed the other two indices in this time line, a new paradigm for understanding the impact of SRI is revealed.

Keywords

Citation

Shank, T., Manullang, D. and Hill, R. (2005), "“Doing Well While Doing Good” Revisited: A Study of Socially Responsible Firms' Short‐Term versus Long‐term Performance", Managerial Finance, Vol. 31 No. 8, pp. 33-46. https://doi.org/10.1108/03074350510769794

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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