Efficiency and Sustainability of CSR Projects
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The progressive expansion of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has been accompanied
by an increasing interest from regulators and market analysts. Governments and supra-national
organisations have issued guidance rules on CSR, while market analysts have created a set of
gatekeepers focused on its evaluation, publishing rankings and comparative reports. The UN Global
Compact and the sustainability indexes are two relevant examples. The complexity and some of the
functions of this CSR infrastructure have common features with the financial system. Information is
at the core of both. The distinction between information and noise is central for building up efficient
financial markets. The aim of this paper is to analyse how information can be separated from noise in
CSR. To this end, we develop a qualitative model that centres on the following variables: the CSR
features of the project under consideration, its financial features, its relationship with corporate
strategy, the performance metrics for its analysis, the different kinds of risk it involves, and its
impact on value creation. This model relies on two common functions that we identify in the CSR
infrastructure and the financial system: the defining function and the performance information
function. The model is applied to Adidas’ CSR policy