Home
Scholarly Works
Do ESG Frameworks Capture Corporate Health...
Journal article

Do ESG Frameworks Capture Corporate Health Impacts? An Analysis of the Food and Beverage Industry

Abstract

Investors use information about companies' social and environmental performance to make investment decisions, a strategy known as Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) investment analysis. ESG screening may offer a mechanism to incentivize corporations to improve their health impact. However, there has been limited investigation of the extent to which ESG investment frameworks capture corporate health impacts in major industries. In this study, we sought to characterize the extent to which ESG frameworks address the health-impacting activities of the food and beverage (F&B) industry. To do this, we conducted a deductive framework analysis during the period of September 2023 to March 2024. Specifically, we identified gaps in existing ESG frameworks by comparing the content of five ESG reporting standards and rating systems to the HEALTH-CORP-FB typology, an evidence-based typology that describes the health-impacting activities of the F&B industry across seven domains (Governance Practices, Political Practices, Preference and Perception Shaping Practices, Economic Practices, Employment Practices, Products and Services, and Environmental Practices). To further assess how ESG frameworks account for the health-impacting activities of the F&B industry, we classified health-focused ESG fields in the packaged foods subindustry by two attributes: relevance to the assigned HEALTH-CORP-FB activity (low, medium, high) and type of business operations addressed (e.g., process, performance). Results indicate that, on average, the ESG fields (n = 1348) covered 39% of the 89 HEALTH-CORP-FB activities (range across frameworks: 27-48%). Higher proportions of activities in the Governance, Environmental, Employment, and Economic Practices domains (range across domains: 43-87%) were represented than activities in the Products and Services, Preference and Perception-Shaping Practices, and Political Practices domains (17-36%). Fields assigned to the latter domains were also less likely to be deemed highly relevant and to measure corporate performance. We conclude that the ESG frameworks included in this study capture some of the activities of the F&B industry that affect population health and health equity; however, critical gaps remain. We discuss how integrating key health-focused ESG indicators (e.g., revenue generation from ultra-processed foods) into existing frameworks could enable investors, public health organizations, civil society, and shareholder advocates to strengthen the accountability of the F&B sector with respect to health.

Authors

Burgess R; Chen K; Kim S; Dharia N; Lin C; Srebotnjak T; Grierson L; Freudenberg N; Esty DC; Ransome Y

Journal

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol. 23, No. 1,

Publisher

MDPI

Publication Date

January 1, 2026

DOI

10.3390/ijerph23010030

ISSN

1661-7827

Contact the Experts team