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The Financial Impact of ISO 14001 Certification: Top-Line, Bottom-Line, or Both?

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The Financial Impact of ISO 14001 Certification: Top-Line, Bottom-Line, or Both? / de Jong, P.; Paulraj, A.; Blome, C.
In: Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 119, No. 1, 31.01.2014, p. 131-149.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

de Jong, P, Paulraj, A & Blome, C 2014, 'The Financial Impact of ISO 14001 Certification: Top-Line, Bottom-Line, or Both?', Journal of Business Ethics, vol. 119, no. 1, pp. 131-149. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-012-1604-z

APA

Vancouver

de Jong P, Paulraj A, Blome C. The Financial Impact of ISO 14001 Certification: Top-Line, Bottom-Line, or Both? Journal of Business Ethics. 2014 Jan 31;119(1):131-149. Epub 2013 Jan 23. doi: 10.1007/s10551-012-1604-z

Author

de Jong, P. ; Paulraj, A. ; Blome, C. / The Financial Impact of ISO 14001 Certification: Top-Line, Bottom-Line, or Both?. In: Journal of Business Ethics. 2014 ; Vol. 119, No. 1. pp. 131-149.

Bibtex

@article{d4622acfa7374846ba2f4f6dff440406,
title = "The Financial Impact of ISO 14001 Certification: Top-Line, Bottom-Line, or Both?",
abstract = "It is not easy being green, but it does beg the question: Does being green pay off on the bottom-line? Unfortunately, that question of becoming ISO 14001 to reap financial benefit remains widely unanswered. In particular, corporate practice is interested in how environmental management impacts firms{\textquoteright} finance through top-line impact, bottom-line impact, or both—as this paves the way for an investment of environmental management. As current findings are mixed, our study tracks financial performance of publicly traded US firms between 1996 and 2005 to test whether ISO 14001 leads to improved financial performance. Employing a rigorous event-study approach, we compare certified firms to different control groups based on several matching criteria that include industry, size, and/or ROA. In the short run, ISO 14001 certification makes only a minor impact on the bottom-line, according to our results. However, these same results show a significant financial improvement over the long haul with ISO 14001 certification. Additionally, this long-term improvement also makes a significant improvement in top-line performance. Thus, we conclude that environmental management pays off along both dimensions.",
keywords = "ISO 14001, Environmental management systems, Event study, Financial performance, Top-line impact, Bottom-line impact",
author = "{de Jong}, P. and A. Paulraj and C. Blome",
year = "2014",
month = jan,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1007/s10551-012-1604-z",
language = "English",
volume = "119",
pages = "131--149",
journal = "Journal of Business Ethics",
issn = "0167-4544",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Financial Impact of ISO 14001 Certification: Top-Line, Bottom-Line, or Both?

AU - de Jong, P.

AU - Paulraj, A.

AU - Blome, C.

PY - 2014/1/31

Y1 - 2014/1/31

N2 - It is not easy being green, but it does beg the question: Does being green pay off on the bottom-line? Unfortunately, that question of becoming ISO 14001 to reap financial benefit remains widely unanswered. In particular, corporate practice is interested in how environmental management impacts firms’ finance through top-line impact, bottom-line impact, or both—as this paves the way for an investment of environmental management. As current findings are mixed, our study tracks financial performance of publicly traded US firms between 1996 and 2005 to test whether ISO 14001 leads to improved financial performance. Employing a rigorous event-study approach, we compare certified firms to different control groups based on several matching criteria that include industry, size, and/or ROA. In the short run, ISO 14001 certification makes only a minor impact on the bottom-line, according to our results. However, these same results show a significant financial improvement over the long haul with ISO 14001 certification. Additionally, this long-term improvement also makes a significant improvement in top-line performance. Thus, we conclude that environmental management pays off along both dimensions.

AB - It is not easy being green, but it does beg the question: Does being green pay off on the bottom-line? Unfortunately, that question of becoming ISO 14001 to reap financial benefit remains widely unanswered. In particular, corporate practice is interested in how environmental management impacts firms’ finance through top-line impact, bottom-line impact, or both—as this paves the way for an investment of environmental management. As current findings are mixed, our study tracks financial performance of publicly traded US firms between 1996 and 2005 to test whether ISO 14001 leads to improved financial performance. Employing a rigorous event-study approach, we compare certified firms to different control groups based on several matching criteria that include industry, size, and/or ROA. In the short run, ISO 14001 certification makes only a minor impact on the bottom-line, according to our results. However, these same results show a significant financial improvement over the long haul with ISO 14001 certification. Additionally, this long-term improvement also makes a significant improvement in top-line performance. Thus, we conclude that environmental management pays off along both dimensions.

KW - ISO 14001

KW - Environmental management systems

KW - Event study

KW - Financial performance

KW - Top-line impact

KW - Bottom-line impact

U2 - 10.1007/s10551-012-1604-z

DO - 10.1007/s10551-012-1604-z

M3 - Journal article

VL - 119

SP - 131

EP - 149

JO - Journal of Business Ethics

JF - Journal of Business Ethics

SN - 0167-4544

IS - 1

ER -