Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility

Stable economic growth is usually a factor of several indices. Modern economists generally believe that economic growth is principally and primarily influenced by factors around it thus, the paper studied the relationship between human rights and stable economic growth observing that these variables...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Economic Affairs (New Delhi)
Main Author: Almazari A.A.; Adebimpe O.I.; Ali M.M.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: AESSRA 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85170672570&doi=10.46852%2f0424-2513.2.2023.29&partnerID=40&md5=67c465e03b620d938148a0edf84ed4b6
id 2-s2.0-85170672570
spelling 2-s2.0-85170672570
Almazari A.A.; Adebimpe O.I.; Ali M.M.
Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
2023
Economic Affairs (New Delhi)
68
2
10.46852/0424-2513.2.2023.29
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85170672570&doi=10.46852%2f0424-2513.2.2023.29&partnerID=40&md5=67c465e03b620d938148a0edf84ed4b6
Stable economic growth is usually a factor of several indices. Modern economists generally believe that economic growth is principally and primarily influenced by factors around it thus, the paper studied the relationship between human rights and stable economic growth observing that these variables could affect directly on corporate social responsibility initiatives. The study examined the nexus between human rights, stable economic growth and corporate social responsibilities. Explorative research design was adopted. The study adopted secondary sources of data. The study sample size was the 19 countries in the population of G-20. The study explanatory variable is human right, measured by Best Countries Index, while the dependent variable is stable economic growth, measured by Gross Domestic Product per capital and Human Development Index. Ordinary least square regression analysis was adopted. The findings of the study exposed that measuring a country's human rights does not immediately translate to an improved economy. There is a need to improve the measurement criteria of human rights and make it more economical and quantitative to aid scientific testing. The study concludes that a country that monitors and improves its human rights indicators and encourages formal and informal businesses to embark on corporate social responsibilities would improve its ratings. The study recommends that countries should make a conscious effort to improve the defense of human rights to reflect the country's perception and its image. The study would assist policymakers in measuring human rights and formulate policies that would assist the government in pursuing these factors deliberately to improve economic growth. © 2023 The Author(s).
AESSRA
4242513
English
Review
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Almazari A.A.; Adebimpe O.I.; Ali M.M.
spellingShingle Almazari A.A.; Adebimpe O.I.; Ali M.M.
Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
author_facet Almazari A.A.; Adebimpe O.I.; Ali M.M.
author_sort Almazari A.A.; Adebimpe O.I.; Ali M.M.
title Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
title_short Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
title_full Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
title_fullStr Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
title_full_unstemmed Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
title_sort Human Right and Stable Economic Growth: Implications for Corporate Social Responsibility
publishDate 2023
container_title Economic Affairs (New Delhi)
container_volume 68
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.46852/0424-2513.2.2023.29
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85170672570&doi=10.46852%2f0424-2513.2.2023.29&partnerID=40&md5=67c465e03b620d938148a0edf84ed4b6
description Stable economic growth is usually a factor of several indices. Modern economists generally believe that economic growth is principally and primarily influenced by factors around it thus, the paper studied the relationship between human rights and stable economic growth observing that these variables could affect directly on corporate social responsibility initiatives. The study examined the nexus between human rights, stable economic growth and corporate social responsibilities. Explorative research design was adopted. The study adopted secondary sources of data. The study sample size was the 19 countries in the population of G-20. The study explanatory variable is human right, measured by Best Countries Index, while the dependent variable is stable economic growth, measured by Gross Domestic Product per capital and Human Development Index. Ordinary least square regression analysis was adopted. The findings of the study exposed that measuring a country's human rights does not immediately translate to an improved economy. There is a need to improve the measurement criteria of human rights and make it more economical and quantitative to aid scientific testing. The study concludes that a country that monitors and improves its human rights indicators and encourages formal and informal businesses to embark on corporate social responsibilities would improve its ratings. The study recommends that countries should make a conscious effort to improve the defense of human rights to reflect the country's perception and its image. The study would assist policymakers in measuring human rights and formulate policies that would assist the government in pursuing these factors deliberately to improve economic growth. © 2023 The Author(s).
publisher AESSRA
issn 4242513
language English
format Review
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809677887474761728