Environmental Social Governance (ESG) and Firm Value: A Case of Southeast Asian Countries
Abstract
This dissertation investigates the relationship between Environmental, Social, and Governance
(ESG) performance and firm value across six Southeast Asian countries—Indonesia, Malaysia,
Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam—over the period 2008–2024. ESG
performance is disentangled into short-term ESG, long-term ESG (permanency), and ESG
controversies to capture different time horizons and dimensional aspects of sustainability
practices.
Using Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) with robust standard errors, the results show that both
short-term and long-term ESG performance are positively and significantly associated with firm
value, while ESG controversies are insignificant. The results remain robust under Two-Stage
Least Squares (2SLS) estimation and alternative firm value measures. Further analyses reveal
that ESG performance and permanency enhance firm value only among non–state-owned
enterprises (non-SOEs), while the relationship is insignificant for SOEs, suggesting that
investors perceive ESG engagement in SOEs as compliance-driven rather than strategic driven.
The positive ESG–value link is also stronger for large firms, where visibility and stakeholder
pressure are higher.
This study contributes to the literature by showing that different time horizons and
dimensions of ESG performance yield heterogeneous impacts on firm value, and by revealing
how ownership structure influences market responses to ESG activities. Limitations include
potential biases in third-party ESG ratings, omitted variables such as governance quality and
media exposure, and the possibility of nonlinear ESG–value relationships. Future research
could examine how media coverage and market competition moderate the effects of ESG
controversies on firm value in emerging markets.
Collections
- Doctor of Economics [100]
