This paper aims to investigate the impact of digital transformation on environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance in Arab Middle East and North Africa (MENA) banks and examines whether returnee CEOs moderate this relationship.
Using a two-step dynamic generalized method of moments (GMM) estimator, the authors analyze panel data from 93 banks across 10 Arab MENA countries over the period 2012–2022.
Digital transformation negatively affects environmental and governance performance but positively influences social performance. Returnee CEOs significantly moderate the relationship, enhancing ESG performance across all dimensions. Furthermore, the relationship exhibits a U-shaped pattern, indicating that digital maturity is critical to realizing sustainability benefits.
These findings provide important insights for regulators and policymakers, highlighting the need for targeted regulations governing digital transformation and proactive oversight of ESG practices in the banking sector. The study also highlights institutional challenges in balancing digital investments with sustainable development goals.
This study contributes to the literature by contrasting agency theory with stakeholder theory, signaling theory, resource-based view and innovation theory to explain how digital transformation influences ESG performance. It further integrates imprinting theory to highlight the role of returnee CEOs as moderators, offering new insights into how international experience shapes sustainability performance in emerging economies.
