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Corporate Social Responsibility and International Competition: A Welfare Analysis
Authors:Yang‐Ming Chang  Hung‐Yi Chen  Leonard F. S. Wang  Shih‐Jye Wu
Affiliation:1. Department of Economics, Kansas State University, , Manhattan, KS, 66506‐4001 USA;2. Department of International Business, Soochow University, , Taipei, Taiwan;3. Department of Applied Economics, National University of Kaohsiung, , Kaohsiung, 811 Taiwan;4. Department of Political Economy, National Sun Yat‐Sen University, , Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Abstract:This paper examines the welfare implications of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in international markets under imperfect competition. Based on a stylized model of an import‐competing duopolistic market, we show the feasibility of moving toward tariff reductions when both domestic and foreign firms launch CSR initiatives in that their payoffs include not only individual profits, but also the benefits of consumers. For the case where the foreign exporter unilaterally adopts the consumer‐oriented CSR as a strategy, there is a rent‐shifting effect because the foreign firm's payoff increases whereas the domestic firm's profit decreases. In response, the importing country's government raises its tariff on the foreign product. If, instead, the domestic firm adopts the CSR strategy unilaterally, the rent‐shifting effect disappears and both the competing firms’ payoffs increase. We further identify the conditions under which the CSR initiatives of the firms constitute the dominant strategy, leading to a Pareto efficient outcome at which the firms’ payoffs, consumer surplus, and social welfare are at their maximum levels.
Keywords:
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