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Sustainability and sovereign credit risk
Affiliation:1. KU, Leuven, Belgium;2. University of Ljubljana, Slovenia;1. Bayes Business School, City, University of London, 106 Bunhill Row, London EC1Y 8TZ, United Kingdom;2. University of Greenwich, Old Royal Naval College, Park Row, London SE10 9LS, United Kingdom;3. Cranfield School of Management, Cranfield University, College Rd, Cranfield, Wharley End, Bedford MK43 0AL, United Kingdom;1. School of Business, Central South University, No.932 South Lushan Road, Changsha, Hunan, 410083, P.R. China;1. Business school, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China;2. School of Economics and Finance, Xi''an Jiaotong University, Xi''an, China
Abstract:The study investigates the impact of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) ratings on sovereign credit risk. The study measures sovereign credit risk using a market-based, structural and an analyst-based approach, while ESG scores are obtained from three different rating agencies. The contributions of this paper are multifold. First, we discover that higher sustainability performance at the corporate level significantly decreases market-based (CDS spreads) and structural (Distance-to-default) sovereign credit risk but has no consistent impact on analyst-based (Credit ratings) sovereign credit risk measure. Second, by expanding our research to include the concept of financial materiality based on the SASB materiality map, we break down and highlight the sustainability themes that require the most attention at the sovereign level and those that can affect the credit health of countries. Third, we demonstrate that the relationship between sustainability and sovereign credit risk varies across ESG rating providers, supporting the widespread belief that sustainability metrics lack standardization and are difficult to compare across providers.
Keywords:ESG ratings
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