The impact of COVID-19 on business perspectives of sustainable development and corporate social responsibility in China
Dongyong Zhang (),
Shuhui Lu,
Stephen Morse () and
Lingyi Liu
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Dongyong Zhang: Henan Agricultural University
Shuhui Lu: Henan Agricultural University
Stephen Morse: University of Surrey
Lingyi Liu: Henan Agricultural University
Environment, Development and Sustainability: A Multidisciplinary Approach to the Theory and Practice of Sustainable Development, 2022, vol. 24, issue 6, No 47, 8544 pages
Abstract:
Abstract The new coronavirus (COVID-19) has generated an unprecedented degree of social and economic impact on the planet, but few researchers have explored the repercussion of COVID-19 for sustainable development (SD) and corporate social responsibility (CSR), especially from the perspective of Chinese businesses. This paper is the first to outline the priority changes of both SD and CSR over the period of COVID-19 incidence in China. An online questionnaire survey of 1161 owners and managers of Chinese companies was conducted, and respondents were asked to score the priorities of their company over the pre, during and post COVID-19 periods. The research was carried out at the end of the first COVID-19 wave in China but during the period of lockdown in some parts of the country. It was found that there was a priority change regarding three dimensions of sustainable development and 13 aspects of CSR. While the social dimension of SD was prioritized during and post COVID-19, the environmental dimension was the only one deemed to be less important and less prioritized over the longer term after the pandemic. The top three short-term CSR priorities were having in place a workplace health and safety plan, engaging in philanthropic activities and protecting biodiversity, and the top three longer-term CSR priorities were job creation, protecting biodiversity and having in place a workplace health and safety plan. Environmental protection and using clean energy were not reported as a CSR priority. The paper concludes that China’s recovery mode cannot be called ‘green’ and suggests ways this could be changed.
Keywords: COVID-19; Impact; Sustainable development; Corporate social responsibility (CSR); Business perspective; China (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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DOI: 10.1007/s10668-021-01798-y
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