Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in Cameroon

Present technological innovations and social organizations continue to impose risks and limitations on the efficient performance of the biosphere. Human activities have increasingly short-lived sustainable natural endowments, to the extent that, the multiplier effects have ripples beyond the traditi...

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Main Authors: Oyewole Simon Oginni, Adewale Daniel Omojowo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-05-01
Series:Economies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/4/2/10
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spelling doaj-0c78619e58d64d0a8e53794996e935292020-11-24T23:53:28ZengMDPI AGEconomies2227-70992016-05-01421010.3390/economies4020010economies4020010Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in CameroonOyewole Simon Oginni0Adewale Daniel Omojowo1Thematic Centre for Governance and Regional Integration, Pan African University, UY II, P.O. Box 18, Soa, Yaounde, CameroonFaculty of Economics and Management, Department of Environmental Economics, Rural Development and Agric-Business, University of Yaoundé II, P.O. BOX 1365, Soa, Yaounde, CameroonPresent technological innovations and social organizations continue to impose risks and limitations on the efficient performance of the biosphere. Human activities have increasingly short-lived sustainable natural endowments, to the extent that, the multiplier effects have ripples beyond the traditional benefits of economic production and consumption. Therefore, this study addressed practical concerns on how industries in Sub-Saharan Africa promote sustainable development in their corporate social responsibility models, using industries in Cameroon as a case study; it examined economic, social, and environmental components of sustainable development and corporate social responsibility (CSR). Our sample consists of 335 business enterprises from the last Censure Survey of Enterprises in Cameroon. The study adopted a systematic analysis through the Adjusted Residual Test, and the Phi and Cramer’s V tests. Findings revealed that industries in Cameroon prioritize environmental and social dimensions over economic dimensions. However, a few large enterprises implement a broad CSR that promotes sustainable business practices, whereas smaller ones do not; industries in Cameroon implement environmental dimensions of CSR as a safe buffer and a social dimension as philanthropy. Hence, there is no concrete evidence that industries promote sustainable development via CSR in Cameroon. The implementation of a sustainable business model is a precondition for promoting sustainable development via CSR. Industries should realize the concrete value in implementing a sustainable business model that helps to adjust to the complex and increasingly changing business environment.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/4/2/10corporate social responsibilityexternalitiesstakeholderssustainable development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oyewole Simon Oginni
Adewale Daniel Omojowo
spellingShingle Oyewole Simon Oginni
Adewale Daniel Omojowo
Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in Cameroon
Economies
corporate social responsibility
externalities
stakeholders
sustainable development
author_facet Oyewole Simon Oginni
Adewale Daniel Omojowo
author_sort Oyewole Simon Oginni
title Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in Cameroon
title_short Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in Cameroon
title_full Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in Cameroon
title_fullStr Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Development and Corporate Social Responsibility in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Industries in Cameroon
title_sort sustainable development and corporate social responsibility in sub-saharan africa: evidence from industries in cameroon
publisher MDPI AG
series Economies
issn 2227-7099
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Present technological innovations and social organizations continue to impose risks and limitations on the efficient performance of the biosphere. Human activities have increasingly short-lived sustainable natural endowments, to the extent that, the multiplier effects have ripples beyond the traditional benefits of economic production and consumption. Therefore, this study addressed practical concerns on how industries in Sub-Saharan Africa promote sustainable development in their corporate social responsibility models, using industries in Cameroon as a case study; it examined economic, social, and environmental components of sustainable development and corporate social responsibility (CSR). Our sample consists of 335 business enterprises from the last Censure Survey of Enterprises in Cameroon. The study adopted a systematic analysis through the Adjusted Residual Test, and the Phi and Cramer’s V tests. Findings revealed that industries in Cameroon prioritize environmental and social dimensions over economic dimensions. However, a few large enterprises implement a broad CSR that promotes sustainable business practices, whereas smaller ones do not; industries in Cameroon implement environmental dimensions of CSR as a safe buffer and a social dimension as philanthropy. Hence, there is no concrete evidence that industries promote sustainable development via CSR in Cameroon. The implementation of a sustainable business model is a precondition for promoting sustainable development via CSR. Industries should realize the concrete value in implementing a sustainable business model that helps to adjust to the complex and increasingly changing business environment.
topic corporate social responsibility
externalities
stakeholders
sustainable development
url http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/4/2/10
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AT adewaledanielomojowo sustainabledevelopmentandcorporatesocialresponsibilityinsubsaharanafricaevidencefromindustriesincameroon
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