Most theorizing on the relationship between corporate social/environmental
performance (CSP) and corporate financial performance (CFP) assumes that the
current evidence is too fractured or too variable to draw any generalizable conclusions. With this integrative, quantitative study, we intend to show that the mainstream claim that we have little generalizable knowledge about CSP and CFP is built on shaky grounds. Providing a methodologically more rigorous review than previous efforts,
we conduct a meta-analysis of 52 studies (which represent the population of prior
quantitative inquiry) yielding a total sample size of 33,878 observations. The metaanalytic findings suggest that corporate virtue in the form of social responsibility and,to a lesser extent, environmental responsibility is likely to pay off, although the operationalizations of CSP and CFP also moderate the positive association. For example, CSP appears to be more highly correlated with accounting-based measures
of CFP than with market-based indicators, and CSP reputation indices are more highly correlated with CFP than are other indicators of CSP. This meta-analysis establishes a greater degree of certainty with respect to the CSP–CFP relationship than is currently assumed to exist by many business scholars.