Shariah governance effects on cash holdings under sustainability commitments: Indonesian Islamic banks

  • 9 Views
  • 0 Downloads

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Type of the article: Research Article

Abstract
This study investigates the link between sustainability commitment and cash holdings and assesses the relationship between board meetings (BM), industry knowledge (IK), and Shariah Supervisory Boards (SSBs) and sustainability commitment in Indonesian Islamic banks. The analysis employs entity-year fixed effects regressions and conducts robustness checks on an unbalanced panel covering 15 banks from 2017 to 2023. Sustainability commitment is proxied by a disclosure index aligned with national and global guidelines, while cash holdings equal cash and equivalents scaled by total assets.
Results from the main specification indicate that stronger sustainability commitment is associated with higher cash holdings (p < 0.05), consistent with precautionary motives under ESG execution and disclosure scrutiny. Board activity, proxied by meeting frequency, is positively related to sustainability commitment (p < 0.01), and SSB size also shows a significant association (p < 0.01). Leadership competency is not a significant factor in the sustainability liquidity link. While standard controls are included, bank age is negatively associated with cash holdings (p < 0.01).
These findings suggest that banks with stronger sustainability commitment maintain larger liquidity buffers, and that SSB oversight and active boards help embed sustainability within prudential liquidity management. The evidence informs regulators and managers seeking to coordinate Shariah governance, sustainability mandates, and cautious liquidity practices in emerging markets.

Acknowledgment
Currently, the manuscript is under the support of The Academic Research Grant (ALG), which is an Internal Research Grant from Unpad (Padjadjaran University) for the year 2023 with reference number 1549/UN6.3.1/PT.00/2023.

view full abstract hide full abstract
    • Table 1. Descriptive statistics
    • Table 2. Correlation analysis
    • Table 3. Unbalanced panel regression fixed effect
    • Table A1. List of Islamic banks in Indonesia
    • Conceptualization
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Data curation
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Formal Analysis
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Funding acquisition
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah
    • Investigation
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Methodology
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Project administration
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo
    • Resources
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Software
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Supervision
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Validation
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Writing – original draft
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Writing – review & editing
      Tettet Fitrijanti, Prasojo, Nunuy Nur Afiah, Sofyan Hadinata
    • Visualization
      Prasojo, Sofyan Hadinata