Impact of Environmental Cost on Financial Performance of Listed Industrial Goods Firms in Nigeria
- Ahmed Tanimu Abdullahi
- Prof. Muhammad Liman Muhammad
- 64-82
- Dec 28, 2023
- Finance
Impact of Environmental Cost on Financial Performance of Listed Industrial Goods Firms in Nigeria
Ahmed Tanimu Abdullahi, Prof. Muhammad Liman Muhammad
Department Of Accounting, Bayero University Kano – Nigeria
DOI: https://doi.org/10.51244/IJRSI.2023.1012006
Received: 07 November 2023; Accepted: 23 November 2023; Published: 28 December 2023
ABSTRACT
To fill the gap in the industrial goods sector of the Nigerian economy on the subject matter, this study investigates the impact of environmental cost on the financial performance of listed industrial goods firms in Nigeria. An explanatory research design was employed to collect panel data extracted from the annual reports and account of the 11 sampled listed firms, for a period of Ten (10) Years (2012 -2021). The regression results obtained from the study’s models indicates that the firms’ environmental cost (Community Development cost and administrative cost) affects their accounting-based financial performance (ROA) significantly and positively, and also affects the market-based financial performance indices (Tobin’s Q) insignificantly and negatively. Thus, based on the study’s findings it recommended that the management of the firms should employ effective and right balance investment on environmental cost components that will cater for all the stakeholders’ interest.
Keywords: Environment Cost, Financial Performance, Industrial Goods, Stock Exchange Group
INTRODUCTION
In the last five decades, financial performance (FP) has gained increasing attention, with more prominence in the business world, as the firm continue to face complex and multifaceted issues in their business operations. It is a crucial aspect of sustainability, which both the firms’ shareholders, stakeholders and potential investors are really concern about. This is most particular with the spiralling effect of globalization, accelerated pace of the fourth industrial revolution, technological advancement, and other interconnected environmental challenges that have brought fluxes to the global business space, which impact extend also to the corporate financial performance. Literatures have defined FP in several ways, but most of the studies described it based on cardinal points that includes, an evaluation mechanism in monetary terms, used to assess a firm’s bottom lines and operational efficiency, corporate management performance, firm’s sustainability and growth rate, and addressing the interest of all stakeholders with legitimate claims (Otley, 2016; and Franco-Santos et al.,2007). FP is viewed as the heart of an organization, that is not only used to evaluate a firm’s policies and resource utilization, but also serve as an appraised tool of entity’s financial health over the period of time (Naz, et al., 2016; and Al-Waeli, et al., 2020).
Firm financial performance (FP) been a term that is permanently embedded in accounting literature, it is mostly conceptualized and operationalized in accordance with the research purpose, scopes and frameworks, and the availability/nature of the used data. It is a vital tool use by the firms’ relevant stakeholders to evaluate corporate overall financial health, compares key businesses performance indicators, rate management productivity, and determined value created on assets used over a given period (Kinyua Et al. 2015; Al-Waeli, et al., 2020; and Fatah & Hamad, 2022). An indicator of good financial performance could be deduced from the internal generated historical data (Al-Mawali, 2022). Thus, financial performance is measured by the aid of various measurements tools/variables (Kinyua, et al., 2015), which although some scholars adjudged it to be arbitrary, because of the perceived notion that it is highly subjective in the measurements of its variable’s (Mishkin, 2007; Mokhtar & Ismail, 2012; Harash, et al, 2014; and Kenton, 2022). The prominent measures of finance performance in empirical literatures comprises of proxies that includes returns on investment (ROI), returns on asset (ROA), returns of Equity (ROE), returns on capital employed (ROCE), Earning Yield (EY), and Tobin’s Q (TQ). It is constructed in studies as either DV or IV, and any other named variable (mediator or moderator). Broadly, studies have categorised its measures into two groups, which are accounting-based measurements and market-based measurements (Kurawa and Shuaibu, 2022). Overall, some of the measures of FP are seen as endogenous and sometimes exogenous, but they all aid firms to evaluate the extent at which its assets are optimally utilized.
However, in view of the obvious fact that business does not operate or exist in a vacuum or closed system without the environment (Kurawa and Shuaibu, 2022), it thereby means environmental cost is a necessary and unavoidable cost that firms must incurred and managed effectively, as studies have shown that it influences businesses performance (Al-Waeli et al., 2020). Industrial environmental related challenges are ranked annually as part of the globally priority area of concern (WEF, 2023), which the business world was left with no choice but to respond to it positively. Environmental cost is a measure that is used to evaluate corporate sustainability practices, and to strategically address any environmental factor that could threatened their long-term financial success and public trust. Effective environmental costs management is evidently shown to influence corporate financial performance, most particularly in terms of risk management, regulatory compliance, and input-output cost. Corporate environment cost (EC) is perceived to comes as result of the interaction of firm economic activities with its operating environment, as such the higher the intensity of firm operations, the higher the environmental impact in terms of degradation, pollutions and waste disposal (Basuki & Irwanda, 2018; and Idris, 2012). EC is considered to be an evolving concept that emerged in the last twenty-five, specifically in the 1970’s from Europe (Abd-Rajak, 2022). A good environmental cost management is viewed as prerequisite of sustainable development, and eco-efficiency (Pandey & Kumar, 2016; Basuki & Irwanada, 2018).
EC is proved to be a realistic business strategy model employed by firms to integrate corporate social responsibilities and sustainable business performance, and it significantly influence the socio-economic and political sphere of emerging and rapidly growing society (Pham, et al. 2021). It is therefore pertinent for firms in industrial sector whose activities are most closely related to the environment (Sief, 2014), to adopt integrated sustainable reporting, which is now recognised pathway to a more stable and resilient business world. Environmental cost is viewed as an integral business strategy that is committed to not only increases in profitability (corporate performance), but to a broader sustainable strategy that address more stakeholders (Idowu & Agboola, 2022). The most common firm’s environmental cost measurement variables include waste product concentrations, emissions from normal business operations, donations, inadvertent emissions and indiscriminate disposal practices capable of contaminating the environment, and have negative health implication to both human and biological living organism.
In the light of the foregone, this study drawing on insights from studies (Sief, 2014; and Basuki & Irwanda, 2018) and the findings based on analysed data from empirical literatures (Okafor, 2018; Idowu & Agboola, 2022; and Oyedokun & Erinoso, 2022) it realised the serious challenges that the operation of industrial enterprises posed on the environment, and how significant this impact on the firms overall financial performance. Thus, this study in its resolved to improve on the finding of prior studies on the subject area, it used three stands point to differentiates it from other works. Firstly, based on cross-country noticed literature gap on the subject matter, and it observed that practically most of the players in the industrial goods sector of Nigeria economy invest little or insignificant amount of their resources in the management of environmental issues, as in a decade the whole firm in the sector were shown to invested little above Ten Billion Naira (N10.0B) on EC, in the form of donations and contribution, and CSR projects. This is despite the fact that virtually all the players in the industry engaged on business activities that have substantial environmental impact. Secondly, the paper employed a different methodological typology that allows it to examined the impact of the environmental cost, with the use of average EC variables. The relevance selected variables are similar to measures used by some prior studies (Idowu and Agboola, 2021; Oyedokun and Erinoso, 2022) that also examine some of the variable on individual basis. This study computes its EC variables on the basis of joint average value, and it was employed to examines its influence on the study’s DV proxied by two separately categorised FP variables (Accounting-Based FP and the Market-based FP variables).
Thirdly, the study employed the postulates theories of stakeholders, legitimacy, signal and institutional to underpin the conducts of the study. The theories were selected based on the study’s variables, which are although similar with prior studies in some instance (Ogbu et al., 2021; Ayu et al., 2020; Emmanuel, et al., 2019; and Zijl & Maroun, 2017). This study selected its theories on the premises that firms are part of community, therefore firm must pay significant attention to gain legitimacy from the community, by providing positive information and ensures that they create value for all its stakeholders not just only the shareholders. Also, corporate business relationship is expected to be carry out in accordance with societal boundaries and norms, so that the firm survival conforms with the society current beliefs and norms (Dewiyanti, 2021). Thus, this study will provide a new perspective on the impact of environmental cost on the financial performance of firms, and it conducted the rest of the paper as follows. In the next sub-section of the paper, it succinctly reviews relevant literature on the study’s main variables, and states the hypothesis formulated for the study. Section two (2) presents the study’s methodology, and in the third section it presents the study’s results and discussions. In the fourth and fifth section it presents the study robustness test checks and it drawn it conclusions drawn from the findings made with a recommendation accordingly. Finally, the study posed below research question to aid it conducts;
To what extent does EC affect the financial performance of the listed Industrial goods firms in Nigeria?
CONCEPTUALIZATION
This study’s conceptualization was premised on some selected broad categories of measures used in extent literatures (Zhang and Wellalege, 2022), to investigates the relationship between environmental cost variables and financial performance indices. On environmental cost (EC), Idowu and Agboola (2022) used business area cost, administrative cost, social cost, environmental remediation cost, and Research and development cost (R&D) to the firm’s return on equity (ROE) on cross section random test, and found that environmental remediation cost and administrative cost has a positive effect, and Business location cost has a negative and highly significant effect, while the R&D Cost and Social Cost have no effect on the firms’ financial performance respectively. Al-Mawali (2022) constructed 3 separates models that was measured by survey instrument developed on the basis of 19 environmental cost items, grouped into four main areas, which are prevention and environmental management, processing costs of non-product output, material purchase value of non-product output, and waste and emission treatment to examined financial performance (Net profit margin, ROA and ROE). He found that environmental cost usage to positively affects Financial Performance, and concludes that investing on environmental costs leads to better financial performance.
Moreso, on the financial performance variables that is the DV of this study, the measures also vary widely between existing literatures. This study investigates the two broad categories of its measures documented in prior empirical studies, basically from two sets of studies (first on Nigeria industries domain and those firms studied outside Nigeria). Firstly, on studies outside Nigeria, Pandey and Kumar (2016) found that there is no significant relationship between the firms’ environmental expenditure and its financial performance. On the other hand, subsequent studies by Ayu et al., (2020) that measured financial performance by the used of (ROA) to environmental and social costs information, they found the firm financial performance to be significantly affected by the EC cost, and it is in agreement with theories of instrumental stakeholders, legitimacy and agency. Pharm, et al. 2021 that measured financial performance measured by earnings yield, return on asset, return on equity, return on capital employed, and with a market-based financial measure, Tobin’s Q, they found positive relationship between corporate sustainability and the accounting based financial indices, but inconclusive results on the Tobin’s Q. On the other hand, Abd-Rajak (2022) shows that on an individual basis green accounting has no effect on profitability. Similarly, Fatah and Hamad (2022) study measured financial performance by the use of ROA to investigate the impact of environmental cost variables (ERPC, ELCP and DCC) on FP, and it found that the 3 EC variables significantly impact on the firm’s financial performance.
For studies in Nigeria, on accounting-based financial performance variables Okafor (2018) used ROA Financial Performance measures, and found that the 3 EC variables significantly affect the firm’s performance (ROA). Onyekachi, et al. (2020) used earning per share, and found that investments on environmental associates significantly affect the firms’ earnings per share. Oyedokun and Erinoso (2022) measured it using ROA, ROE and PAT, and found that the environmental variables studied had a significant effect on the financial performance of the listed oil and gas Firms. On the other hand, for the market-based measures of FP Chiamogu and Okoye (2020) measured it using Tobin’s Q (TQ) to EC, and found that the studied EC variables had a positive significant effect on Tobin’s. While studies that measured both FP measures, Kurawa & Shuaibu (2022) used the earning per Share (EPS) and Tobin’s Q (TQ) measured as Net profit after tax divided by outstanding shares and Market value of shares divided by book value of shares respectively to investigates environmental disclosure, and found a positive significant relationship between the used 4 disclosure variables and EPS while negative with TQ of the studied firms. Thus, based on findings from the aforementioned studies, it clearly shows that environmental related cost/variable significantly affects the two broadly classified financial performance indices, but it influences the accounting-based indicators more significantly and positively than the market-based indices.
In the light of the foregone, based on the document empirical evidence and insight drawn from the postulates of theories like stakeholders, legitimacy, institutional and agency theories, this study posits the following null hypothesis to be tested in the subsequent sub-section;
H01: Environmental Cost does not have significant impact on the ROA of listed industrial good firms in Nigeria.
H02: Environmental cost does not have significant impact on the FTQ’s of listed industrial good firms in Nigeria.
METHODOLOGY AND DATA
In examining the impact of environmental cost on the firm’s financial performance, this study employed explanatory research design, with the aid of ex-post facto technique to sourced it relevant panel data, and was generated from the archived annual reports and accounts of the eleven (11) sampled listed industrial goods firm, for the period of Ten (10) years (2012 – 2021). The sample firms were drawn from a total population of the thirteen (13) listed firms on the floor of Nigeria exchange group, which was arrived at with the aid of two-point stands filtering mechanism used. It is required that; 1) the firms must be listed on or before the last decade (10 years’ periods) covered by the study, and 2) the listed firms must have published its financial statements for the entire periods covered, with complete data needed for the study. The filtering mechanism used were consider very necessary, because in the first selection criterion, it enabled the study selects only firms that are listed on or before the 1st January 2012 and 31st December 2021, and in the second criterion, it enabled the study selects entities that has published all its financial statements within the stipulated periods. Thus, table 1 in appendix II presents the study’s sampled population. The data generated from the sample firms were used as an analysis to examine the relationship between the study’s main variables (DV and IV), and as well used to test the formulated hypotheses.
2.1 Dependant Variables (DV)
This study employed Returns on Asset (ROA) and Tobin’s Q as proxy for its two DV, that represents the each of the two most categorised financial performance variables, known as accounting-based ratio and market-based indicator respectively. For returns on assets abbreviated as ROA, the study used the firms yearly extracted net profit after tax divided by the firm’s total assets for the period, and is adopted from Al-Mawali (2021) study. While for firms Tobin’s Q abbreviated as FTQ, it was measured as the Firm’s Market Capitalization divided by the Firm’s Total Asset for the period, as used by Kurawa and Shuaibu (2022); and Chiamogu and Okoye (2020).
2.2 Independent Variables
The study adopts some of the objectively used reliable measures by literatures for environmental cost, that is comparable across firms in the different sectors. These measures were proxied by variables such as community development cost and firm administrative cost. It is a sum average of the variables used to examine its relationship with the study DV. For the community development cost, it modified the adopted one from Okafor (2018), and the measure is the firm’s yearly total monetary donations and charitable contribution divided by the firm’s total Assets in a period. On the other hand, for the firm administrative cost, it was a modified copy of adopted measure from Idowu & Agboola (2021) that used firms total administrative cost divided by the total asset for the period. The two individual computed variables were jointly summed and divided by two (2) to arrive at the firm EC for each period used.
2.3 Model Specifications
To examine the impact of environment cost variables measured on the listed industrial goods firm financial performance, this study applies a logit model in the understated form for the two of its constructed models. The model was adopted from empirical literature like Emeka and Okeke (2019).
ROAit = α0 + β1FECit + β2LEVit+ β3 FSVit + β4 AGEit + Ԑit…. (I)
FTQit = α0 + β1FECit + β2LEVit+ β3 FSVit + β4 AGEit + Ԑit…. (II)
Where; the study’s dependent variables proxy by ROAit and FTQit stand for Returns on Asset of firm I in period t and FTQ stands for Firm Tobin’s Q for firm i in period t respectively. The study’s independent variable (IV) presented in the model is FEC, which stands for Firm’s Environmental Cost for firm i in period t. On other hand, i denotes firms sampled (11); α represent Constant Term of firm i in period t; β stand for the Coefficient Term; and t is the study’s time period (Ten years from 2012 – 2021); and e denotes the Error term. Moreso, in the models (I and II) equations, the study follows prior studies (Okeke, 2019; Kurawa & Shuaibu, 2018; and Zhang & Wellalage, 2022) to introduce control variables to control the presence of heterogeneity. It used the individual firm Size value denoted by FSV, and it is measured as the Natural Log of the firm’s total asset in the period. Leverage represented by LEV in the equation, measured the firm’s Total Interest-Bearing debt divided by total asset. It was employed to examine whether the extent of the firm relying more or less on either of the equity or external funding could affect their level of investment on environmental cost. The firm Age denoted by AGE in the model is measure as the age of the firm by incorporation at the respective period, and it was use to evaluate the extent at which Firms’ age that come with experience and potential of evaluating business risk could influenced their investment decision on EC that can impact of their financial performance.
2.4 Study’s Data
Summary statistics for the variables used in Models I and II were demonstrated in Table 1. From the data presented in the table, the firm’s financial performance measured by Return on Asset (ROA) and Firm’s Tobin’s Q (FTQ) that has a mean value of 9.9% with a variation of 16.3% and mean of 239% and standard deviation of 351% respectively. It shows that the firms’ stakeholders enjoy higher investment returns under the market-based as against the accounting-based financial performance indices, that mean for every N1 invested the market-based generates 351% investment returns.
Table 2 reports the Pearson correlation matrix for variables used in Models I and II. In the both models (I and II) the firm’s ROA and FTQ are significantly and positively correlated with the firm environmental cost, at a co-efficient value of 0.880 and 0.055 respectively.
Table 2: Summary Statistics
Variables | Observation | Mean | SD | Min | Max. | Skewness | Kurtosis |
ROA | 110 | 0. 099 | 0.163 | -0.149 | 0.540 | 1.012 | 4.240 |
FTQ | 110 | 2.392 | 3.512 | 0.007 | 16.016 | 2.078 | 6.535 |
FEC | 110 | 0.061 | 0.042 | 0.008 | 0.132 | 0.201 | 1.548 |
LEV | 110 | 0.155 | 0.176 | 0.000 | 0.885 | 1.745 | 6.509 |
FSV | 110 | 9.815 | 1.118 | 8.239 | 12.412 | 0.935 | 2.802 |
AGE | 110 | 46.954 | 14.487 | 20.000 | 81.000 | 0.361 | 2.591 |
Table 3. Correlation Matrix
VARIABLES | ROA | FTQ | FEC | LEV | FSV | AGE | VIF |
ROA | 1.000 | ||||||
FTQ | -0.051** | 1.000 | |||||
FEC | 0.880*** | 0.055** | 1.000 | 1.81 | |||
LEV | -0.387*** | -0.033 | 0.109*** | 1.000 | 1.75 | ||
FSV | 0.312*** | -0.296*** | -0.650*** | -0.145*** | 1.0000 | 1.17 | |
AGE | -0.039* | -0.299*** | 0.273*** | -0.232*** | -0.189*** | 1.000 | 1.11 |
Note: *, **, and *** stand for the significance level of 10%, 5%, and 1%, respectively
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
This section presents the study’s regression results for the models (I and II). It tested the hypothesis formulated with the regression results of the models. Thus, the regression results for the models are hereby presented.
3.1 Regression Results
Table 3 and 4 presents the study’s regressions results for the two models formulated in the preceding section of this study, which were subsequently used to test the hypothesis formulated for the study. The best estimates amongst the variables run on a panel regression formulated for the two models were selected based on the dictates of the Hausman Specification test. It checks for the presence of endogeneity in the models from the first run result of Ordinary Least Square (OLS), then further conducts robust regression test after correcting heteroskedasticity, and finally run the Random Effect (RE) and Fixed Effect (FE) regression.
3.1.1 Model I Regression Result
Table 3 presents a regression result for model I, which is the FE estimates of Driscoll-Kraay found to be more efficient than the RE, as dictated by the Hausman Specification test with a prob >chi2 = 0.0000 (See Appendix I).
Table 3 Estimates Fixed Effect Driscoll-Kraay Results of Model I
Variables | Coefficients | Z | p>/t/ |
FEC | 2.174 | 8.23 *** | 0.000 |
LEV | -0.373 | -4.63 *** | 0.001 |
FSV | 0.085 | 10.03 *** | 0.000 |
AGE | -0.002 | -2.61 ** | 0.028 |
CONS | -0.721 | -11.49*** | 0.000 |
R-squared | 0.395 | ||
P-Value | 0.000 |
NOTE: *, **, *** Indicates significant@ 10%, 5% and 1% respectively
Table 3 results show that the firms’ environmental cost influences the firms’ financial performance (ROA) significantly and positively, which support H1. Thus, the study rejected the Null hypothesis (HO1) for the model, which implies that the more the listed industrial goods firms in Nigeria invests on environmental cost, it will significantly impact on their ROA. For instance, an increase in a unit of the Firms environmental cost will lead to an increase in ROA by 2.174. Thus, it shows the legitimacy of the firms to invest effectively on environmental cost, with an impressive return that catered for all its stakeholders interest, and will signal good information about the firms to the markets and to all and sundries. The finding supports the studies of Tochukwu (2018), Al-Mawali (2021), Fatah & Hamad (2022), and Oyedekon & Erinoso (2022).
3.1.2 Model I Regression result
Table 4 Estimates Fixed Effect, Heteroskedastic Panel Corrected Standard Errors Results of Model II
Variables | Coefficients | Z | p>/t/ |
FEC | -10.776 | -0.88 | 0.376 |
LEV | -3.595 | -2.46*** | 0.014 |
FSV | -1.508 | -3.51*** | 0.000 |
AGE | -0.096 | -5.89*** | 0.000 |
CONS | 22.926 | 4.01*** | 0.000 |
R-squared | 0.259 | ||
P-Value | 0.000 |
NOTE: *, **, *** Indicates significant@ 10%, 5% and 1% respectively
The result presented in table 4 is the fixed effect Linear regression, heteroskedastic panels corrected standard errors found more efficient, after the Hausman Specification test dictated in favour of FE as against RE with a prob >chi2 = 0.0108 (See appendix I).
Table 4 results shows that the firm’s environmental cost affects Tobin’s Q financial performance ratio insignificantly and negatively, which supports HO2. The model result indicates that the firm’s environmental cost has a probability of 37.6% in affecting their market-Based financial performance ratio (Tobin’s Q), based on its negative value of -0.88. Thus, based on the model result, the study failed to reject the model null hypothesis (HO2). This means that the firms’ investment in environmental cost does not positively impact on the market-based financial performance indices (Tobin’s Q). The finding is in line with the result found by Kurawa and Shuaibu (2022), but contradicts the result of Chiamogu and Okoye (2018).
On the other hand, the control variables that are made-up of leverage, firm’s size and age were used in the models (I and II). In the first model, they are all found to significantly affect the firm’s accounting based financial performance (ROA), with the firm size value impacting positively while the others (Leverage and Age) influence negatively. Similarly, in the second model (II) all the control variables affect the firms’ market-based financial performance significantly, but with negative value respectively. This implies that the significant influence of firms’ size and age on their financial performance is premised on experience and the advantage of economies of scale that comes with age and size respectively, and is in line with prior studies (Emeka & Benjamin, 2019; and Kurawa & Shuaibu, 2022). For the leverage, it supports the documented findings of prior studies (Nwanna & Glory, 2017; and Abubakar, 2017) that posits interest bearing debt have significant impact on the firm’s financial performance, as higher debt will lead to a higher finance cost that is paid via higher interest expenses.
ROBUSTNESS CHECKS
The study conducted various robustness checks, with a diagnostic test for the study’s independent and dependent variables. This was to ensure accurate data presentation, checks, and improve the validity and reliability of the panel data collected and regressed that is used to test the study’s hypothesis (see appendix I). The checks include Normality Test of Residuals, multi collin earity, Robustness regression test, heteroskedasticity, VIF, and Hausman specification tests to select the superiority between FE and RE. Table 5 below presents a brief summary of some of the checks.
Table 5. Diagnostic Test on the Study Models
Model | Model Multicollinearity VIF test | Heteroskedasticity test | Hausman test |
1 | 1.46 | 0.001 *** | 0.001*** |
2 | 1.46 | 0.001*** | 0.011*** |
Note: *, **, and *** stand for the significance level of 10%, 5%, and 1%, respectively
CONCLUSION
Based on the evident mixed findings drawn from the study’s two models results, which indicated that environmental cost influence accounting-based financial performance indices significantly and positively, while it influenced the market-based financial performance indices negatively and insignificantly, this study concluded that the environmental cost impact more on the firm’s accounting-based financial performance indices than on the market-based financial performance indices. Thus, premised on the evident of the foregone findings, it practically implied that the management of the industrial goods firms in Nigeria are motivated to incur/invest on environmental cost due to its economic benefits on the accounting-based variables, specifically its influence on the firm’s returns on asset that centrally catered for all stakeholders. It also signified that the firms are encouraged to efficiently utilized its asset in the conservation of the environment and minimized other externalities, because it positively impacts on their earning abilities and taxation strategy, and it confirm both the stakeholders and legitimacy theory.
The study therefore suggested an advancement of a further study on the subject matter, that will employ either a mediator or a moderator variable to investigates the possible divergent relationship that exist between firm environmental cost and corporate financial performance. Additionally, in line with global best practice, the management of the listed industrial goods firms in Nigeria are urge to be more responsible, by providing adequate environmental cost information on their yearly financial statements that is in line with the IFAC, 2005 four categorized cost, that includes waste recycling and remediation cost, labour and materials, domain costs that related to water, land and air, and any hidden and obvious environmental costs. This will enable the relevant stakeholders to assess and appreciate the firms’ level of commitment to all environmental costs’ variables, and it will enhance the general society trust and acceptability of the firms.
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- Ogbu, I. I., Nwafor, O. C. & Onyeanu, E. O. (2021). Environmental Remediation Cost Management and Social Harmony of Solid Mineral Resource-Based Communities Cum Firm Performance in Nigeria, International Journal of Management (IJM), 12(9),136-150
- Okafor, T. G. (2018). Environmental Costs Accounting and Reporting on Firm Financial Performance: A Survey of Quoted Nigerian Oil Companies, International Journal of Finance and Accounting, 7(1), 1-6 DOI: 10.5923/j.ijfa.20180701.01
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- Oyedokun, G. E., & Erinoso, O. M. (2022). Environmental Conservation, Sustainability and Financial Performance of listed Oil and Gas Companies in Nigeria, International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science (IJRISS), VI (VIII), 582-590.
- Pandey, S. N. & Kumar, A. (2016). Exploring the Association between Environmental Cost and Corporate Financial Performance: A Study of Selected NIFTY Companies, NMIMS Management Review, XXXII, 12-21
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- WEF (2023). The Global Risks Report 2023.
- Yan, L. (2014). Research on Measurement Methods of Enterprise’s Environmental Costs, 3rd International Conference on Science and Social Research.
- Zhang, D. and Wellalage, N. H. (2022). Comparative analysis of environmental performance measures and their impact on firms’ financing choices, Journal of Cleaner Production, 375, 1-11.
- Zijl, W. V. Wostmann, C. & Maroun, W. (2017). Strategy Disclosure by Listed Financial Service Companies: Signalling Theory, Legitimacy Theory and South African Integrated Reporting Practice, South Africa Journal of Business Management, 48(3), 73-85.
APPENDIX 1
Study Model I
___ ____ ____ ____ ____ (R)
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Licensed to: Andrey
Notes:
- Unicode is supported; see help unicode_advice.
- Maximum number of variables is set to 5000; see help set_maxvar.
. *(8 variables, 110 observations pasted into data editor). describe
Contains data
obs: 110
vars: 8
size: 2,750
——————————————————————————————————————————————–
storage display value variable name type format label variable label
——————————————————————————————————————————
firms int %8.0g FIRMs
year int %8.0g Year
roa float %8.0g ROA
ftq float %8.0g FTQ
fec float %8.0g FEC
lev float %8.0g LEV
fsv float %8.0g FSV
age byte %8.0g AGE
——————————————————————————————————————————————-
Sorted by:
Note: Dataset has changed since last saved.
. tabstat roa ftq fec lev fsv age
stats | roa ftq fec lev fsv age
———+————————————————————
mean | .0894609 2.392218 .0654795 .1548664 9.815497 46.95455
———————————————————————-
. tabstat roa ftq fec lev fsv age, stat (skewness kurtosis)col(stat)
variable | skewness kurtosis
————-+——————–
roa | -1.778957 21.87006
ftq | 2.078361 6.535368
fec | 3.818878 29.00404
lev | 1.74546 6.5091
fsv | .9348968 2.801871
age | .3605826 2.590665
———————————-
. winsor roa, gen(roa1)p(0.05)
. winsor fec, gen(fec1)p(0.05)
. tabstat roa1 ftq fec1 lev fsv age, stat (skewness kurtosis)col(stat)
variable | skewness kurtosis
————-+——————–
roa1 | 1.012405 4.240123
ftq | 2.078361 6.535368
fec1 | .2013726 1.548217
lev | 1.74546 6.5091
fsv | .9348968 2.801871
age | .3605826 2.590665
———————————-
. tabstat roa1 ftq fec1 lev fsv age, statistics( count mean sd min max skewness kurtosis ) columns(statistics)
variable | N mean sd min max skewness kurtosis
————-+———————————————————————-
roa1 | 110 .0988855 .1629695 -.149 .5402 1.012405 4.240123
ftq | 110 2.392218 3.51237 .0071 16.0158 2.078361 6.535368
fec1 | 110 .0614736 .0419359 .0082487 .1323809 .2013726 1.548217
lev | 110 .1548664 .1761667 0 .8854 1.74546 6.5091
fsv | 110 9.815497 1.117778 8.2394 12.412 .9348968 2.801871
age | 110 46.95455 14.48656 20 81 .3605826 2.590665
————————————————————————————
. correlate roa1 ftq fec1 lev fsv age
(obs=110)
| roa1 ftq fec1 lev fsv age
————-+——————————————————
roa1 | 1.0000
ftq | -0.0505 1.0000
fec1 | 0.0880 0.0553 1.0000
lev | -0.3865 -0.0331 0.1087 1.0000
fsv | 0.3125 -0.2957 -0.6496 -0.1447 1.0000
age | -0.0393 -0.2990 0.2733 -0.2316 -0.1886 1.0000
. regress roa1 ftq fec1 lev fsv age
Source | SS df MS Number of obs = 110
————-+———————————- F(5, 104) = 13.61
Model | 1.14497685 5 .22899537 Prob > F = 0.0000
Residual | 1.74995922 104 .016826531 R-squared = 0.3955
————-+———————————- Adj R-squared = 0.3664
Total | 2.89493607 109 .026559046 Root MSE = .12972
——————————————————————————
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
ftq | .001605 .0041099 0.39 0.697 -.0065452 .0097551
fec1 | 2.190872 .4015253 5.46 0.000 1.394632 2.987112
lev | -.3673405 .0756311 -4.86 0.000 -.5173198 -.2173613
fsv | .0876279 .0159578 5.49 0.000 .055983 .1192728
age | -.0018179 .0010082 -1.80 0.074 -.0038173 .0001814
_cons | -.7574975 .1937953 -3.91 0.000 -1.141801 -.3731941
——————————————————————————
. regress roa1 fec1 lev fsv age
Source | SS df MS Number of obs = 110
————-+———————————- F(4, 105) = 17.11
Model | 1.14241087 4 .285602717 Prob > F = 0.0000
Residual | 1.7525252 105 .016690716 R-squared = 0.3946
————-+———————————- Adj R-squared = 0.3716
Total | 2.89493607 109 .026559046 Root MSE = .12919
——————————————————————————
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 2.173577 .3974616 5.47 0.000 1.385484 2.96167
lev | -.3731103 .0738739 -5.05 0.000 -.5195885 -.2266321
fsv | .085207 .014645 5.82 0.000 .0561688 .1142453
age | -.0019721 .000924 -2.13 0.035 -.0038042 -.0001399
_cons | -.7207017 .1686615 -4.27 0.000 -1.055126 -.3862771
——————————————————————————
. estat vif
Variable | VIF 1/VIF
————-+———————-
fec1 | 1.81 0.551171
fsv | 1.75 0.571427
age | 1.17 0.854614
lev | 1.11 0.904106
————-+———————-
Mean VIF | 1.46
. estat hettest
Breusch-Pagan / Cook-Weisberg test for heteroskedasticity
Ho: Constant variance
Variables: fitted values of roa1
chi2(1) = 11.10
Prob > chi2 = 0.0009
. rreg roa1 fec1 lev fsv age
Huber iteration 1: maximum difference in weights = .75477248
Huber iteration 2: maximum difference in weights = .16603909
Huber iteration 3: maximum difference in weights = .06209863
Huber iteration 4: maximum difference in weights = .03265928
Biweight iteration 5: maximum difference in weights = .29412325
Biweight iteration 6: maximum difference in weights = .21372947
Biweight iteration 7: maximum difference in weights = .09276271
Biweight iteration 8: maximum difference in weights = .05521548
Biweight iteration 9: maximum difference in weights = .0356094
Biweight iteration 10: maximum difference in weights = .01735444
Biweight iteration 11: maximum difference in weights = .00529115
Robust regression Number of obs = 110
F( 4, 105) = 20.46
Prob > F = 0.0000
——————————————————————————
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | .860302 .2627495 3.27 0.001 .3393183 1.381286
lev | -.2066354 .0488357 -4.23 0.000 -.3034675 -.1098032
fsv | .0633372 .0096813 6.54 0.000 .0441409 .0825335
age | -.0021944 .0006108 -3.59 0.001 -.0034055 -.0009832
_cons | -.4722386 .1114969 -4.24 0.000 -.6933163 -.251161
——————————————————————————
. xtset firms year, yearly
panel variable: firms (strongly balanced)
time variable: year, 2012 to 2021
delta: 1 year
. xtreg roa1 fec1 lev fsv age, re
Random-effects GLS regression Number of obs = 110
Group variable: firms Number of groups = 11
R-sq: Obs per group:
within = 0.0477 min = 10
between = 0.4989 avg = 10.0
overall = 0.3172 max = 10
Wald chi2(4) = 12.82
corr(u_i, X) = 0 (assumed) Prob > chi2 = 0.0122
——————————————————————————
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. z P>|z| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | .5774748 .499334 1.16 0.247 -.4012018 1.556151
lev | -.2562619 .0864028 -2.97 0.003 -.4256082 -.0869156
fsv | .0396706 .026994 1.47 0.142 -.0132368 .092578
age | -.001749 .0017324 -1.01 0.313 -.0051444 .0016465
_cons | -.2041923 .296515 -0.69 0.491 -.7853511 .3769665
————-+—————————————————————-
sigma_u | .08379342
sigma_e | .09824485
rho | .42111041 (fraction of variance due to u_i)
——————————————————————————
. estimates store re
. xtreg roa1 fec1 lev fsv age, fe
Fixed-effects (within) regression Number of obs = 110
Group variable: firms Number of groups = 11
R-sq: Obs per group:
within = 0.0754 min = 10
between = 0.0332 avg = 10.0
overall = 0.0051 max = 10
F(4,95) = 1.94
corr(u_i, Xb) = -0.4980 Prob > F = 0.1108
——————————————————————————
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | -.2126451 .5553085 -0.38 0.703 -1.315072 .8897816
lev | -.2265385 .0927931 -2.44 0.016 -.4107562 -.0423208
fsv | -.0586511 .0721252 -0.81 0.418 -.2018378 .0845357
age | -.0020871 .0036562 -0.57 0.569 -.0093455 .0051712
_cons | .820731 .6636317 1.24 0.219 -.4967444 2.138206
————-+—————————————————————-
sigma_u | .16157852
sigma_e | .09824485
rho | .73008555 (fraction of variance due to u_i)
——————————————————————————
F test that all u_i=0: F(10, 95) = 8.66 Prob > F = 0.0000
. estimates store fe
. hausman fe re
—- Coefficients —-
| (b) (B) (b-B) sqrt(diag(V_b-V_B))
| fe re Difference S.E.
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | -.2126451 .5774748 -.7901199 .2429673
lev | -.2265385 -.2562619 .0297234 .0338397
fsv | -.0586511 .0396706 -.0983216 .0668833
age | -.0020871 -.001749 -.0003382 .0032197
——————————————————————————
b = consistent under Ho and Ha; obtained from xtreg
B = inconsistent under Ha, efficient under Ho; obtained from xtreg
Test: Ho: difference in coefficients not systematic
chi2(4) = (b-B)'[(V_b-V_B)^(-1)](b-B)
= 17.71
Prob>chi2 = 0.0014
. xttest3
Modified Wald test for groupwise heteroskedasticity
in fixed effect regression model
H0: sigma(i)^2 = sigma^2 for all i
chi2 (11) = 4197.00
Prob>chi2 = 0.0000
. xtcsd,pesaran abs
Pesaran’s test of cross sectional independence = -1.330, Pr = 0.1834
Average absolute value of the off-diagonal elements = 0.311
. xtserial roa1 fec1 lev fsv age
Wooldridge test for autocorrelation in panel data
H0: no first order autocorrelation
F( 1, 10) = 1.168
Prob > F = 0.3051
. xtpcse roa1 fec1 lev fsv age
Linear regression, correlated panels corrected standard errors (PCSEs)
Group variable: firms Number of obs = 110
Time variable: year Number of groups = 11
Panels: correlated (balanced) Obs per group:
Autocorrelation: no autocorrelation min = 10
avg = 10
max = 10
Estimated covariances = 66 R-squared = 0.3946
Estimated autocorrelations = 0 Wald chi2(4) = 62.59
Estimated coefficients = 5 Prob > chi2 = 0.0000
——————————————————————————
| Panel-corrected
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. z P>|z| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 2.173577 .3885309 5.59 0.000 1.412071 2.935084
lev | -.3731103 .0789655 -4.72 0.000 -.5278798 -.2183409
fsv | .085207 .0111246 7.66 0.000 .0634033 .1070108
age | -.0019721 .0009002 -2.19 0.028 -.0037365 -.0002077
_cons | -.7207017 .1150989 -6.26 0.000 -.9462914 -.495112
——————————————————————————
. xtpcse roa1 fec1 lev fsv age, hetonly
Linear regression, heteroskedastic panels corrected standard errors
Group variable: firms Number of obs = 110
Time variable: year Number of groups = 11
Panels: heteroskedastic (balanced) Obs per group:
Autocorrelation: no autocorrelation min = 10
avg = 10
max = 10
Estimated covariances = 11 R-squared = 0.3946
Estimated autocorrelations = 0 Wald chi2(4) = 75.16
Estimated coefficients = 5 Prob > chi2 = 0.0000
——————————————————————————
| Het-corrected
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. z P>|z| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 2.173577 .4323386 5.03 0.000 1.326209 3.020945
lev | -.3731103 .0821868 -4.54 0.000 -.5341934 -.2120272
fsv | .085207 .0116146 7.34 0.000 .0624428 .1079712
age | -.0019721 .0009137 -2.16 0.031 -.0037629 -.0001812
_cons | -.7207017 .1360987 -5.30 0.000 -.9874502 -.4539533
——————————————————————————
. xtscc roa1 fec1 lev fsv age
Regression with Driscoll-Kraay standard errors Number of obs = 110
Method: Pooled OLS Number of groups = 11
Group variable (i): firms F( 4, 9) = 65.75
maximum lag: 2 Prob > F = 0.0000
R-squared = 0.3946
Root MSE = 0.1292
——————————————————————————
| Drisc/Kraay
roa1 | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 2.173577 .2611015 8.32 0.000 1.582925 2.76423
lev | -.3731103 .0806548 -4.63 0.001 -.5555643 -.1906564
fsv | .085207 .0084916 10.03 0.000 .0659977 .1044164
age | -.0019721 .0007557 -2.61 0.028 -.0036816 -.0002626
_cons | -.7207017 .0627452 -11.49 0.000 -.8626412 -.5787622
——————————————————————————
Study Model II
. regress ftq fec1 lev fsv age
Source | SS df MS Number of obs = 110
————-+———————————- F(4, 105) = 9.19
Model | 348.560732 4 87.140183 Prob > F = 0.0000
Residual | 996.143976 105 9.48708548 R-squared = 0.2592
————-+———————————- Adj R-squared = 0.2310
Total | 1344.70471 109 12.3367404 Root MSE = 3.0801
——————————————————————————
ftq | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | -10.77564 9.47598 -1.14 0.258 -29.56476 8.013478
lev | -3.594968 1.761245 -2.04 0.044 -7.087191 -.1027457
fsv | -1.50836 .3491542 -4.32 0.000 -2.200668 -.8160513
age | -.0960401 .0220294 -4.36 0.000 -.1397204 -.0523599
_cons | 22.9262 4.0211 5.70 0.000 14.9531 30.89929
——————————————————————————
. vif
Variable | VIF 1/VIF
————-+———————-
fec1 | 1.81 0.551171
fsv | 1.75 0.571427
age | 1.17 0.854614
lev | 1.11 0.904106
————-+———————-
Mean VIF | 1.46
. estat hettest
Breusch-Pagan / Cook-Weisberg test for heteroskedasticity
Ho: Constant variance
Variables: fitted values of ftq
chi2(1) = 40.85
Prob > chi2 = 0.0000
. rreg ftq fec1 lev fsv age
Huber iteration 1: maximum difference in weights = .6743077
Huber iteration 2: maximum difference in weights = .39739898
Huber iteration 3: maximum difference in weights = .16712793
Huber iteration 4: maximum difference in weights = .09119277
Huber iteration 5: maximum difference in weights = .06353332
Huber iteration 6: maximum difference in weights = .02900497
Biweight iteration 7: maximum difference in weights = .28344782
Biweight iteration 8: maximum difference in weights = .16706177
Biweight iteration 9: maximum difference in weights = .01745157
Biweight iteration 10: maximum difference in weights = .01210296
Biweight iteration 11: maximum difference in weights = .00525957
Robust regression Number of obs = 110
F( 4, 105) = 14.79
Prob > F = 0.0000
——————————————————————————
ftq | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 18.0497 3.893 4.64 0.000 10.3306 25.7688
lev | 1.940003 .723569 2.68 0.009 .5052996 3.374707
fsv | -.0240325 .1434424 -0.17 0.867 -.3084523 .2603872
age | -.0321553 .0090503 -3.55 0.001 -.0501004 -.0142102
_cons | 1.577256 1.651981 0.95 0.342 -1.698318 4.85283
——————————————————————————
. xtset firms year, yearly
panel variable: firms (strongly balanced)
time variable: year, 2012 to 2021
delta: 1 year
. xtreg ftq fec1 lev fsv age, re
Random-effects GLS regression Number of obs = 110
Group variable: firms Number of groups = 11
R-sq: Obs per group:
within = 0.1789 min = 10
between = 0.0502 avg = 10.0
overall = 0.0504 max = 10
Wald chi2(4) = 13.07
corr(u_i, X) = 0 (assumed) Prob > chi2 = 0.0109
——————————————————————————
ftq | Coef. Std. Err. z P>|z| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 4.294381 8.084234 0.53 0.595 -11.55043 20.13919
lev | -.3854344 1.365745 -0.28 0.778 -3.062246 2.291377
fsv | -2.291857 .7383388 -3.10 0.002 -3.738974 -.8447392
age | .0321917 .0424058 0.76 0.448 -.050922 .1153055
_cons | 23.17208 7.377912 3.14 0.002 8.71164 37.63252
————-+—————————————————————-
sigma_u | 3.4401203
sigma_e | 1.4106937
rho | .85604839 (fraction of variance due to u_i)
——————————————————————————
. estimates store re
. xtreg ftq fec1 lev fsv age, fe
Fixed-effects (within) regression Number of obs = 110
Group variable: firms Number of groups = 11
R-sq: Obs per group:
within = 0.2071 min = 10
between = 0.0207 avg = 10.0
overall = 0.0229 max = 10
F(4,95) = 6.20
corr(u_i, Xb) = -0.8626 Prob > F = 0.0002
——————————————————————————
ftq | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 1.518475 7.973651 0.19 0.849 -14.31122 17.34817
lev | -.5984061 1.332413 -0.45 0.654 -3.24358 2.046768
fsv | -4.647664 1.035643 -4.49 0.000 -6.703675 -2.591652
age | .1464347 .0524985 2.79 0.006 .042212 .2506575
_cons | 41.1349 9.529059 4.32 0.000 22.21732 60.05247
————-+—————————————————————-
sigma_u | 6.6299402
sigma_e | 1.4106937
rho | .95668721 (fraction of variance due to u_i)
——————————————————————————
F test that all u_i=0: F(10, 95) = 40.56 Prob > F = 0.0000
. estimate store fe
. hausman fe re
—- Coefficients —-
| (b) (B) (b-B) sqrt(diag(V_b-V_B))
| fe re Difference S.E.
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | 1.518475 4.294381 -2.775905 .
lev | -.5984061 -.3854344 -.2129717 .
fsv | -4.647664 -2.291857 -2.355807 .726232
age | .1464347 .0321917 .114243 .0309491
——————————————————————————
b = consistent under Ho and Ha; obtained from xtreg
B = inconsistent under Ha, efficient under Ho; obtained from xtreg
Test: Ho: difference in coefficients not systematic
chi2(4) = (b-B)'[(V_b-V_B)^(-1)](b-B)
= 13.10
Prob>chi2 = 0.0108
(V_b-V_B is not positive definite)
. xttest3
Modified Wald test for group wise heteroskedasticity
in fixed effect regression model
H0: sigma(i)^2 = sigma^2 for all i
chi2 (11) = 2.4e+05
Prob>chi2 = 0.0000
. xtcsd, pesaran abs
Pesaran’s test of cross-sectional independence = -0.384, Pr = 0.7011
Average absolute value of the off-diagonal elements = 0.493
. xtserial ftq fec1 lev fsv age
Wooldridge test for auto correlation in panel data
H0: no first order auto correlation
F( 1, 10) = 215.899
Prob > F = 0.0000
. xtpcse ftq fec1 lev fsv age
Linear regression, correlated panels corrected standard errors (PCSEs)
Group variable: firms Number of obs = 110
Time variable: year Number of groups = 11
Panels: correlated (balanced) Obs per group:
Autocorrelation: no autocorrelation min = 10
avg = 10
max = 10
Estimated covariances = 66 R-squared = 0.2592
Estimated autocorrelations = 0 Wald chi2(4) = 152.23
Estimated coefficients = 5 Prob > chi2 = 0.0000
——————————————————————————
| Panel-corrected
ftq | Coef. Std. Err. z P>|z| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | -10.77564 7.035428 -1.53 0.126 -24.56483 3.013544
lev | -3.594968 1.014319 -3.54 0.000 -5.582997 -1.60694
fsv | -1.50836 .267928 -5.63 0.000 -2.033489 -.9832303
age | -.0960401 .0119578 -8.03 0.000 -.1194769 -.0726034
_cons | 22.9262 3.705412 6.19 0.000 15.66372 30.18867
——————————————————————————
. xtpcse ftq fec1 lev fsv age, hetonly
Linear regression, heteroskedastic panels corrected standard errors
Group variable: firms Number of obs = 110
Time variable: year Number of groups = 11
Panels: heteroskedastic (balanced) Obs per group:
Autocorrelation: no autocorrelation min = 10
avg = 10
max = 10
Estimated covariances = 11 R-squared = 0.2592
Estimated autocorrelations = 0 Wald chi2(4) = 46.92
Estimated coefficients = 5 Prob > chi2 = 0.0000
——————————————————————————
| Het-corrected
ftq | Coef. Std. Err. z P>|z| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | -10.77564 12.17593 -0.88 0.376 -34.64002 13.08874
lev | -3.594968 1.459532 -2.46 0.014 -6.4556 -.7343374
fsv | -1.50836 .4295553 -3.51 0.000 -2.350272 -.6664467
age | -.0960401 .0163119 -5.89 0.000 -.1280109 -.0640693
_cons | 22.9262 5.715733 4.01 0.000 11.72356 34.12883
——————————————————————————
. xtscc ftq fec1 lev fsv age
Regression with Driscoll-Kraay standard errors Number of obs = 110
Method: Pooled OLS Number of groups = 11
Group variable (i): firms F( 4, 9) = 86.85
maximum lag: 2 Prob > F = 0.0000
R-squared = 0.2592
Root MSE = 3.0801
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| Drisc/Kraay
ftq | Coef. Std. Err. t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval]
————-+—————————————————————-
fec1 | -10.77564 14.37623 -0.75 0.473 -43.29692 21.74564
lev | -3.594968 1.331162 -2.70 0.024 -6.606266 -.583671
fsv | -1.50836 .4869522 -3.10 0.013 -2.609922 -.4067971
age | -.0960401 .0143612 -6.69 0.000 -.1285274 -.0635529
_cons | 22.9262 6.30229 3.64 0.005 8.669426 37.18297
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APPENDIX II
Table 1 Sampled Population of Listed Industrial Goods Firms in Nigeria
S/N | Company | Sector | Date Listed | Date Incorporated |
1 | Austin Laz & Company Plc. | Industrial Goods | 2010 | 1982 |
2 | Berger Paints Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1969 | 1959 |
3 | Beta Glass Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1986 | 1974 |
4 | Cap Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1978 | 1965 |
5 | Cutix Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1987 | 1982 |
6 | Dangote Cement Plc. | Industrial Goods | 2010 | 1992 |
7 | Greif Nigeria Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1979 | 1940 |
8 | Lafarge Africa Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1979 | 1959 |
9 | Meyer Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1979 | 1960 |
10 | Premier Paints Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1995 | 1982 |
11 | Tripple Gee & Company Plc. | Industrial Goods | 1980 | 1970 |
Source: NSE Daily Stock Listing as at 31st December, 2021.