1. Introduction
With the recent intensification of environmental problems such as the depletion of natural resources, air pollution, water pollution and shortage, and soil erosion, the balance between environmental protection and economic development has attracted worldwide attention, and both green economy and sustainable development have gradually become the future economic development directions of all countries in the world. The COVID-19 virus spread throughout the world since its discovery in late 2019. Many experts show that poor ecological environment is an important factor that affects the generation and spread of virus and the increasing mortality rates [
1], hence stressing the importance and urgency of environmental protection. As micro-entities of national economic operation, enterprises are also subjects of natural resource consumption and ecological pollution and have an undeniable responsibility toward environmental protection. Improving the ecological environment should ultimately be integrated into the corporate environmental responsibility (CER) of firms.
Compared with a large number of corporate social responsibility (CSR) studies in the fields of management and economics, CER has been relatively ignored in the literature [
2]. Meanwhile, the existing works on the driving factors of CER are less numerous than the impact studies [
3,
4] and have focused on external pressures, such as legal and institutional factors [
5,
6]. Government attention and relevant laws and regulations do play an important role in promoting CER performance, but direct government control does not necessarily lead to better results than market solutions [
7]. As a node in the supply chain, companies can consider improving CER performance through good supply chain management [
8,
9], but few studies have examined the driving factors of CER from the supply chain perspective.
Many companies around the world have started to underscore the relationship orientation of economic development, which has a distinctive reliance on major suppliers or customers. For example, according to the China Stock Market and Accounting Research (CSMAR) database, almost all of the top five suppliers (customers) of Chinese listed companies from 2013 to 2019 had 30% or more annual purchase ratios (sales ratios). In addition, since the 1990s, American companies have gradually changed their previous practice of relying on quantities of customers and suppliers and sought to deal with fewer customers and suppliers. Relevant statistics show that more than one-third of the annual sales revenue of US manufacturing companies come from their few top customers. Therefore, supply chain concentration (SCC) is an issue that cannot be ignored in the field of supply chain management. Previous studies pointed out that SCC has a significant impact on business operations and financial conditions [
10,
11], so it is also very likely to be an important factor that affects CER, but related research remains scarce. From a traditional operations management (OM) perspective, maintaining close relationships with suppliers (customers) can promote the sharing of information between both parties, thereby improving cooperation efficiency and reducing transaction costs [
12,
13]. However, SCC may also increase business risks and reduce the negotiation ability of enterprises, which may force them to give up their interests [
14,
15]. What is the impact of SCC on CER performance? It will be explored in our study.
Our study focuses on the relationship between SCC and CER performance and explores the related impact mechanism. Given that the most basic prerequisite for the fulfillment of CER is to have a material foundation, this paper explains the impact of SCC on CER via the operating cash flow (OCF), which is representative of the “hematopoietic” ability of companies. In addition, the Chinese government attaches great importance to scientific and technological innovation and puts forward that “innovation is the first driving force for development.” Innovation is also becoming a common practice in society. According to the Statistical Bulletin of National Science and Technology Expenditures in 2020, published by the National Bureau of Statistics, the intensity of R&D investment in China continued to increase in 2020, and corporate R&D accounted for 76.6% of all R&D expenditures, representing a 10.4% increase compared to the previous year. Enterprises have become the mainstays of technological innovation in China, and their innovation momentum continues. Such continuous high-intensity investment has led to a faster technology update rate and an unpredictable trajectory of technological changes. Therefore, all enterprises face a great uncertainty in the technological environment. Given that a company is not only part of the supply chain but also operates in a turbulent environment, the uncertainty of the external technological environment may affect the relationship between SCC and CER performance. Therefore, this paper investigates the moderating effect of technology uncertainty (TU) based on the above research questions. Finally, the existing research on CER has focused on developed countries, so the findings are not necessarily applicable to developing countries [
16]. Since China is the largest developing country in the world and its environmental problems have attracted much attention in recent years, this paper selects Chinese companies as the sample.
In sum, this study explores the relationship between SCC and CER and its transmission mechanism by applying fixed effect models and conducting various robustness tests using a sample of Chinese A-share listed firms from 2013 to 2019. In this way, the research framework of “Supply Chain Concentration—Operating Cash Flow—Corporate Environmental Responsibility” is established, and the moderating effect of TU is explored based on real practice. Our research offers several contributions to the supply chain and environmental responsibility literature. First, previous studies on the driving factors of CER have mostly focused on institutional factors, external pressures, company-specific factors, and managerial characteristics [
2,
5,
17], yet have ignored the impact of SCC on CER from the supply chain perspective. Meanwhile, previous supply chain management studies on the consequences of SCC have focused mainly on financial and operating variables and have rarely considered sustainability issues. By focusing on environmental responsibility issues, this paper points out the negative impact of SCC on CER performance, thereby filling the research gap on both sides. Second, this research explains the negative correlation between SCC and CER performance from the perspective of financial constraints. Previous mechanism explorations that consider financial constraints have often explored external financing constraints instead of the internal operating cash flow (OCF) from the “hematopoietic” capacity perspective. On the basis of specific circumstances, this study explores the mediating effect of OCF. Third, by combining actual conditions, this study incorporates environmental factors, explores the strengthening effect of TU on the negative relationship between SCC and CER performance, and establishes a research framework for studying the relationship between enterprise behavior, inter-firm relationships, and environmental factors, which can yield important insights for enterprise managers.
The rest of this article is organized as follows.
Section 2 reviews the related literature.
Section 3 develops the research hypotheses.
Section 4 presents the data, sample, measures, and empirical model.
Section 5 performs panel regressions and provides the analysis results.
Section 6 conducts several robustness checks.
Section 7 presents the main results, managerial implications, limitations, and potential future research opportunities.
7. Conclusions and Implications
7.1. Main Conclusions
This study investigates the impact of SCC on CER performance and explains such effect from the perspective of capital constraints resulting from the internal “hematopoietic” capacity of enterprises, which opens the “black box” of transmission. This study also examines the moderating effect of TU on the above relationship. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study is the first to deeply investigate the impact of SCC on CER performance, which so far has been inadequately explored in the literature. Furthermore, building upon the real environment, this study incorporates three variables from micro to macro, namely, enterprise behavior, inter-enterprise relationship, and technological environment uncertainty, into the research framework and expands the supply chain and environmental responsibility literature. Based on a sample of Chinese A-share listed firms from 2013 to 2019, this study reveals several critical findings through fixed effects models and multiple robustness tests. First, SCC has a significant negative impact on CER performance, which is not conducive to the sustainable development of enterprises. Specifically, both SUP and CUS are detrimental to CER performance. Second, SCC has a negative impact on corporate OCF and reduces CER performance by reducing OCF. Moreover, OCF has a partial mediating effect on the relationship between SCC and CER fulfillment, thereby indicating that the concentration of suppliers and customers threatens the “hematopoiesis” ability of a firm and influence its sustainable development decision-making. Third, TU significantly enhances the negative correlation between SCC and CER performance, thereby indicating that in a turbulent technological environment, those firms with high SCC generally face higher risks, attach more importance to their existing partners, and will make more concessions, thereby harming their CER performance.
7.2. Managerial Implications
This research offers some valuable insights for the sustainable development of enterprises and their choice of transaction plans. First, managers should pay attention to the SCC of firms. Although strengthening cooperation with major customers or suppliers and establishing close relationships may bring certain benefits to the company, they may also cause the company to lose its bargaining power and introduce constraints and risks to its operations. A concentrated customer or supplier base has a significant negative impact on CER performance, thereby making corporate behavior short-sighted and not conducive to the sustainable development of the company. Therefore, managers should actively expand their channels of suppliers and customers, as well as actively perform the corresponding responsibilities toward existing suppliers and customers, and enhance the company’s reputation and product competitiveness, so as to attract more new partners and maintain an appropriate supply chain concentration. In addition, managers should be careful not to over-compromise on transaction terms such as business credit for fear of losing key suppliers (customers). They should have the courage to break the game dilemma, learn to sacrifice short-term losses for long-term benefits, and avoid the vicious circle of increasing reliance. Second, suppliers or customers with negotiation advantages should use their bargaining power with caution. The competition between enterprises has evolved into a competition between supply chains. The behavior of enterprises is no longer the behavior of independent individuals, but a behavior of mutual influence and interaction in the supply chain network. As the idea of sustainable development attracts increasing attention, the CER implementation of one company in the chain may affect the entire supply chain. For example, the 2015 emissions scandal led to huge penalties for Volkswagen, and the company lost one-third of its market value, which had a significant impact on the market value of its supply chain partners [
50]. When suppliers or customers use their own negotiating advantages to reduce corporate cash flow, firms will respond in opportunistic ways, such as by reducing their environmental performance. From a sustainability perspective, such approach has an adverse impact on all companies. Third, when making management decisions, companies should consider the impact of the external technological environment and adjust their trading plans with suppliers or customers in a timely manner according to changes in their technological environment.
7.3. Limitations and Future Research Directions
We conclude the study by pointing out some caveats and some directions for future research. First, this research only uses econometric methods to analyze the secondary data of Chinese listed companies. The results of this work may only be applicable to China and have limited applicability in companies from other countries or regions. Multi-method and cross-country research may be conducted in the future to address this limitation. Second, given the limited information on the names and nature of the suppliers and customers of a company, this research only focuses on the proportion of the top five suppliers and customers. However, some interesting phenomena may be left undetected. Future research may check for potential differences in the impact of customer and supplier heterogeneity on CER performance and explore the internal reasons. Third, environmental uncertainty includes market uncertainty, technology uncertainty, economic policy uncertainty, and other aspects, but this study only explores the moderating effect of technology uncertainty. Future investigations may be carried out from the other perspectives of environmental uncertainty.