Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
We examine the relationship between banks’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) scores, measured at the peak of the boom, and their lending behaviors during the Great Recession. High-CSR banks, expected to better support local borrowers during critical periods, instead reduced small business lending more sharply than their low-CSR counterparts. This paradox arises from CSR scores’ emphasis on visible but less material attributes, such as employee benefits, which are easier to measure during booms but deplete financial slack necessary for sustained lending under stress. Our findings highlight a misalignment between CSR metrics and material social impacts, underscoring the need for more reliable performance measures to implement stakeholderism effectively.