The Effects of Institutional Distance and Headquarters’ Financial Performance on the Generation of Environmental Standards in Multinational Companies
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Aguilera Caracuel, Javier; Aragón Correa, Juan Alberto; Hurtado Torres, Nuria Esther; Rugman, Alan M.Editorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Natural environment Multinational company Environmental standardization Environmental institutional distance between countries Financial performance
Date
2011Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Aguilera-Caracuel, J., Aragón-Correa, J.A., Hurtado-Torres, N.E. et al. The Effects of Institutional Distance and Headquarters’ Financial Performance on the Generation of Environmental Standards in Multinational Companies. J Bus Ethics 105, 461–474 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-011-0978-7
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Education and Science ECO2010-20483, programme FPU; Andalusia Regional Government P08-SEJ-0457, P10-SEJ-6765Abstract
This article combines institutional and resources’ arguments to show that the institutional distance between the home and the host country, and the headquarters’ financial performance have a relevant impact on the environmental standardization decision in multinational companies. Using a sample of 135 multinational companies in three different industries with headquarters and subsidiaries based in the USA, Canada, Mexico, France, and Spain, we find that a high environmental institutional distance between headquarters’ and subsidiaries’ countries deters the standardization of environmental practices. On the other hand, high-profit headquarters are willing to standardize their environmental practices, rather than taking advantage of countries with lax environmental protection to undertake more pollution-intensive activities. Finally, we show that headquarters’ financial performance also imposes a moderating effect on the relationship between environmental institutional distance between countries and environmental standardization within the multinational company.