PhD defence Bin Dong
Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Rob Bauer
Co-supervisor: Dr. Peiran Jiao
Keywords: Sustainability Preferences, Socially Responsible Investment, Belief Elicitation, Survey Experiment
"Sustainability Preferences"
This dissertation investigates why some individuals choose to invest in sustainable financial products while others do not. Instead of assuming that such choices are guided mainly by moral considerations, the research shows that people’s expectations about financial performance play a key role. Through a series of experimental and empirical studies, the dissertation finds that investors often understate how well sustainable investments might perform. When they are asked about their expectations in more careful and engaging ways, they tend to believe that sustainable funds will do better and they are more willing to invest in them.
The research also reveals that many investors prefer moderate forms of sustainable investing—such as excluding a small number of controversial companies—because these options feel more secure and maintain broad diversification. Finally, the dissertation shows that sustainable investments clearly outperformed the market only during specific periods, such as the COVID-19 crisis, indicating that their benefits depend on the broader economic environment. Overall, the thesis highlights how understanding sustainability preferences can help guide more effective and informed investment decisions.
Click here for the live stream.
Also read
-
PhD defence Amira Gamal El-Din
"Resilience of Public Organizations: The Case of the Education Sector in Egypt"
27 Nov -
PhD defence Linde Daphne Kattenberg
"The Energy Transition in the Housing Market"
27 Nov -
PhD defence Negash Haile Dedho
"The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly? Host country corruption, Multinational firms’ Foreign Direct Investment, and Innovation"
3 Dec