Can greenwashing be profitable in the long term?
Bingshang Du, Jiangrui Hu, and Yujie Peng studied the relationship between greenwashing practices and financial metrics in their article "An Empirical Study on the Impact of Corporate Greenwashing Behaviours on Financial Performance".
They measured greenwashing using a peer-relative greenwashing score, calculated as the difference between a company's normalised ESG disclosure score and its normalised ESG performance score using a sample of 349 listed companies in China from 2017 to 2020.
Their main conclusions include:
The findings suggest that companies should focus on authentic environmental practices and be aware that attempts to mislead stakeholders about environmental performance can backfire.
Academics might question the study's reliance on ESG scores as a measure of greenwashing, given the ongoing debates about the reliability and consistency of ESG ratings from rating agencies.
Additionally, the negative financial impacts may be underestimated, as the study does not account for the potential short-term benefits of greenwashing, such as improved brand image or increased sales, which might offset some of the negative financial impacts in certain cases.