1. Introduction
Forestry faces such issues as ecological safety, climate change, and energy shortages and plays an important role in sustainable development. Forestry companies have become the targets of public criticism for their unsustainable use of forest resources, huge energy consumption, high exhaust emissions, and water pollution [
1,
2,
3,
4]. With globalization and increasing societal expectations about the sustainable use of forests, corporate social responsibility (CSR) practices in the forest sector have gained attention and become increasingly crucial because of the environmentally sensitive nature of forest-based businesses [
5,
6,
7]. CSR can help forestry companies improve relationships with stakeholders, maintain legitimacy [
8,
9,
10], address challenges [
11], realize sustainable development [
11,
12], and achieve competitive advantages [
6,
11,
13,
14,
15,
16]. In China’s transitioning economy, forestry companies face serious challenges associated with environmental deterioration, trade frictions, and irresponsible corporate behavior. For example, Chinese forestry companies are accused of using large amounts of illegal timber. With the Chinese government’s increase in environmental protection efforts and the upgrading of green trade barriers, CSR has become a new threshold for Chinese forestry companies to survive in the domestic and international markets. In this context, it is essential to study the CSR activities of Chinese forestry companies to determine the status of CSR as well as possible countermeasures.
Several studies discussed the motivations, contents, and influencing factors of CSR in forestry companies [
6,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23]. The review by Li and Gao [
9] showed that forestry companies sampled in most studies are headquartered in North America or Europe, especially large forestry companies [
9]. Further, little research has focused on forestry companies in emerging economies, including China. Most Chinese forestry companies are relatively small, which makes them different from their international counterparts. Additionally, CSR activities vary according to the contexts of forestry companies, including social and cultural backgrounds and institutional arrangements [
5,
6,
21]. China’s economic transition and institutional differences may cause the motivations, contents, strategies, and determinants of CSR in Chinese forestry companies to differ from those of their international counterparts. There is a lack of emphasis on these aspects in the literature.
This study seeks to bridge the knowledge gap by evaluating the CSR activities of Chinese forestry companies in the following manner. First, this study analyzes the contents, levels, and priorities of CSR in these companies and compares these activities with those of their international counterparts. Second, it analyzes the CSR strategies in Chinese forestry companies. Finally, it verifies the impact of some contextual factors on CSR levels and strategies. This study found that Chinese forestry companies implement diverse CSR activities, focus on environmental and employee responsibility, and pay less attention to community responsibility. Additionally, the majority of these companies adopt reactive CSR strategies. Finally, forest resources and industry type partially explain the variance in the levels of CSR for the government and environment, respectively.
The rest of this article is organized as follows. The second section introduces the theoretical background. The third section describes the research method and data resources. The fourth section presents the results. The fifth section discusses the results. The final section concludes the study.
5. Discussion
The contents of CSR are diverse in the Chinese forestry sector. CSR activities involve a variety of stakeholders. Chinese forestry companies are attempting to balance economic, environmental, and social considerations. They are implementing similar CSR activities as their international counterparts, albeit with different emphases. Both Chinese forestry companies and their international counterparts focus on environmental and employee responsibility and pay less attention to community responsibility. However, for Chinese forestry companies, employee CSR activities rank first followed by environmental activities. This result is different from the findings on international forestry companies. Some research has concluded that environmental responsibility is the most important in the forestry sector [
6,
14,
35,
38]. Employees are one of the most important stakeholders of forestry companies. Most Chinese forestry companies are confronted with the issue of high personnel turnover; thus, they strive to create better work environments and conditions. A joint priority is to attract more skilled or technical workers and increase the retention of employees in Chinese forestry companies. The high proportion of the subcategory, competitive wages and welfare, indicates that forestry companies adopt more economic means to realize employee responsibility such as high salaries and welfare. Non-economic means such as employee development are less utilized. Chinese forestry companies emphasize pollution control, whereas foreign forestry companies emphasize the use of energy and resources. Most foreign forestry companies seek innovations to reduce resource usage and increase energy efficiency [
26]. Nowadays, public awareness of environmental protection has intensified and the penalties for the violation of environmental regulations have been enhanced in China. The gap between the proportions of environmental and employee responsibilities is not large.
The economic dimension of CSR activities exceeds the social dimension. This finding is consistent with the previous conclusion that stakeholders have better perceptions of the economic dimension of CSR activities than the social dimension in the Chinese forestry sector [
2,
7,
36]. The economic dimension of CSR activities includes those regarding employees, consumers and products, and investors and creditors. The CSR activities based on the economic dimension have a direct relationship with corporate operations. The social dimension of CSR activities has an indirect relationship with corporate operations, such as CSR activities regarding communities and governments. Chinese forestry companies implement more CSR activities based on the economic dimension that can bring about direct economic benefits and are less involved in CSR activities for which benefits are not directly reflected in revenues. The priority of these companies is profit rather than social and environmental contributions.
This study identified four types of CSR strategies of Chinese forestry companies: Proactive, focused, opportunistic, and reactive. The majority of Chinese forestry companies adopt a reactive CSR strategy. Only 7.89% of forestry companies adopt a proactive CSR strategy. Listed forestry companies are industrial leaders, and it can thus be inferred that CSR strategies for the whole industry should be improved. Despite growing concerns and pressures from consumers, governments, and related organizations in domestic and international markets, the CSR strategies of the Chinese forestry sector are at a relatively inferior level and cannot achieve first-mover advantages. Economic growth is still the main priority of Chinese forestry companies, hence, only a few have implemented a proactive CSR strategy. CSR strategies should improve gradually. From the perspective of a company’s dynamic growth, at the beginning of the development phase, the company should adopt a focused CSR strategy and implement more CSR activities associated with the production process that can cut costs and improve revenues, such as reducing pollution, adopting eco-friendly production, saving energy, and improving efficiency. Thereafter, the company can implement more product-oriented CSR activities that can have a more positive influence on investors [
60]. Finally, forestry companies could integrate all their CSR activities and develop more proactive CSR strategies. The CSR strategy should correspond to the firm’s corporate characteristics. For example, small- and medium-sized forestry companies should choose a focused CSR strategy and should focus limited resources on specific CSR categories. Large companies should choose a proactive CSR strategy to achieve sustainable development and gain competitiveness.
Company size does not influence the CSR levels of forestry companies. From the resource-based view, large forestry companies have easier access to the various resources needed to implement CSR. However, the resources are not the only decisive factor. From the strategy management perspective, small companies are also motivated to implement CSR to achieve differentiation strategies and obtain more access to the resources controlled by influential stakeholders. In other words, both large and small companies are motivated to implement CSR. This result is inconsistent with the conclusion of Han and Hansen [
35] because of the different contexts. The understanding of CSR in China is relatively weak, with profits instead of social responsibilities the priority, even if companies have relatively high access to financial resources.
There is a significant difference among industries regarding the levels of corporate environmental responsibility. The paper industry is a pollution-intensive industry. The government, communities, and the media pay more attention to the environmental problems of paper companies than those of other companies in the forestry sector. There are more rules and regulations on the environmental behaviors of paper companies. With greater pressure, paper companies tend to implement activities that reflect greater environmental responsibility. As contingency theory states, the industrial characteristics affect the strategic CSR decision. That is, industries influence the levels of CSR in forestry companies. This result is consistent with the conclusion of Waddock and Graves [
48] but differs from the conclusion of Balabanis et al. [
51]. This inconsistency may originate from the different samples used. The sample of Balabanis et al. [
51] mainly comes from the consumer sector. The difference in industrial characteristics may be relatively weak.
Forest resources partially explain the variance in government responsibility among forestry companies. This is consistent with stakeholder theory. Forestry companies with forest resources have more stakeholders. In particular, the use of forestland and forest harvesting are the targets of direct government supervision. Forestry companies with forestland are more tightly regulated by the government than those without. For example, forest harvesting amounts are assigned by the government. A good relationship with the government therefore affects the operations and the performance of forestry companies. Thus, forestry companies with forestland should pay more attention to government CSR.
Ownership does not influence the CSR levels of forestry companies. Owing to the nature of ownership, it is easier for state-owned forestry companies to obtain resources and government support, which may be scarce for private and foreign forestry companies. Therefore, private and foreign forestry companies are motivated to implement CSR to gain such scarce resources. However, state-owned forestry companies also have social obligations to develop the national economy, maintain social stability, and retain an ecological balance. Thus, it is natural for state-owned forestry companies to implement CSR by, for example, increasing employment, paying taxes, increasing fiscal revenue, and maintaining social stability. Therefore, there is no difference among forestry companies with different ownership. This result is consistent with the conclusion of Muller and Kräussl [
55] and different from the opinions of Xu [
52], Oh et al. [
53], and Zhang et al. [
54]. Hence, this issue is controversial and requires more research attention.
6. Conclusions and Limitations
6.1. Conclusions
The results are as follows. First, the CSR contents of Chinese forestry companies are diverse, including the environment, employees, communities, general social issues, consumers and products, investors and creditors, governments, and supply chains. Second, these companies focus on environmental and employee responsibility and pay less attention to community responsibility. The activities pertaining to employee responsibility are prioritized over environmental activities in these companies. Third, four types of CSR strategies were identified in Chinese forestry companies: Reactive, focused, opportunistic, and proactive. The majority of these companies adopt a reactive CSR strategy. Only a few choose a proactive CSR strategy. Finally, forest resources partially explain the variance in government responsibility among forestry companies. The industry type influences the CSR levels.
6.2. Limitations
This study is based on a quantitative content analysis of the disclosed information of Chinese listed forestry companies. The data sources include corporate annual reports, CSR reports, and environmental reports. It cannot be ruled out that forestry companies still have undisclosed CSR activities. However, the disclosure of CSR information reflects the levels of corporate management. The results are reliable to some extent. The CSR level is represented by the number of CSR activities in Chinese forestry companies, but it does not reflect the intensity of each activity. Some forestry companies may implement a few CSR activities, albeit with a large amount of capital and resources. Listed forestry companies are relatively large in the Chinese forestry sector. Small- and medium-sized forestry companies should be considered in future research to obtain an overall understanding of CSR activities in China’s forestry sector.