The Effect of Firm-level ESG Practices on Macroeconomic Performance

Authors :
Xiaoyan Zhou, Ben Caldecott, Elizabeth Harnett, & Kim Schumacher
Organisation:
University of Oxford, Oxford Sustainable Finance Group, University of Oxford’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment (SSEE)

This working paper investigates whether the development and adoption of firm-level environmental, social and governance (ESG) practices affects national macroeconomic performance, and whether this differs between developed countries and emerging economies.

Using dynamic panel techniques - generalised method-of-moments (GMM) estimators - the paper finds that an increase of micro-ESG performance can result in the improvement of living standards as measured by GDP per capita.

When testing this link by country type, the paper finds that firm-level social performance in a country is positively associated with GDP per capita in both developed countries and emerging economies. As for the other two components of firm-level ESG measures, namely environmental and governance performance, the paper finds that these affect macroeconomic performance in emerging economies, but that the effects remain insignificant in developed countries. While further research is needed, these results may be of particular interest to policymakers and central banks, as they suggest that encouraging the adoption of ESG practices at the firm-level could support macroeconomic performance.