Voluntary business initiatives can reduce public pressure for regulating firm behaviour abroad
Dennis Kolcava, Lukas Rudolph and Prof. Thomas Bernauer examined public preferences on extraterritorial social and environmental regulation, corporate self-regulation, and the interplay between them. Their analysis, based on a vignette survey experiment in Switzerland, was published in Journal of European Public Policy.
Abstract
Almost all regulatory policy stops at the national border. Thus, when conducting business abroad, the behaviour of firms is regulated by their host, not their home country. Yet, international institutions have issued (non-binding) codes of conduct on social/environmental aspects of firm behaviour, and various high-income countries discuss how to improve extraterritorial firm behaviour – with high political contestation over the appropriate mix of state intervention and corporate self-regulation. Exploiting a unique national referendum on this issue in Switzerland, we investigate how these interact from a public opinion standpoint. Based on a nationally representative survey experiment (N=1564), we find that while baseline support for state intervention is high (approx. 60%), corporate self-regulation decreases such support. However, only credible voluntary business initiatives lead to substantial reductions. Our results speak to a broad policy debate in European countries and the EU on how to ensure compliance of firms with human rights and environmental standards.
- Article: "Voluntary business initiatives can reduce public pressure for regulating firm behaviour abroad"
- Journal: Journal of European Public Policy (2020)
- Authors: Dennis Kolcava, Lukas Rudolph & Prof. Thomas Bernauer
- For more information and the full article, please visit the external page Journal of European Public Policy homepage.