XF-RTLWXU3-G
Research / Academic Paper ACTIVE

Why is corporate virtue in the eye of the beholder? The case of ESG ratings

Abstract

ABSTRACT Despite the rising use of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) ratings, there is substantial disagreement across rating agencies regarding what rating to give to individual firms. As what drives this disagreement is unclear, we examine whether a firm's ESG disclosure helps explain some of this disagreement. We predict and find that greater ESG disclosure actually leads to greater ESG rating disagreement. These findings hold using firm fixed effects and using a difference-in-differences design with mandatory ESG disclosure shocks. We also find that raters disagree more about ESG outcome metrics than input metrics (policies), and that disclosure appears to amplify disagreement more for outcomes. Last, we examine consequences of ESG disagreement and find that greater ESG disagreement is associated with higher return volatility, larger absolute price movements, and a lower likelihood of issuing external financing. Overall, our findings highlight that ESG disclosure generally exacerbates ESG rating disagreement rather than resolves it. Data Availability: The data used in this study are publicly available from the sources cited in the text. JEL Classifications: G24; M14; M41; Q56.

Source: resolved

Document Metadata

Issuer
American Accounting Association
Document Type
Research / Academic Paper
Publication Year
2022
Retrieved
5 May 2026
Source
Contact XFID for Access
Record ID
XFRTLWXU3G
Validation
Inferred by XFID

Topics

Corporate DisclosureEsg Ratings

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Academic / report citation
American Accounting Association (2022). Why is corporate virtue in the eye of the beholder? The case of ESG ratings. XFID: XF-RTLWXU3-G. Retrieved from https://xframework.id/XFRTLWXU3G
Identifier only
XF-RTLWXU3-G