Understanding how financial management practices translate into firm-level financial sustainability remains an important yet insufficiently explored issue. This study examines how financial discipline and financial risk management contribute to financial sustainability through financial resilience capacity. Drawing on a resilience-based perspective, financial resilience capacity is conceptualized as the firm’s ability to absorb financial shocks and adapt to uncertainty. The study employs a quantitative, survey-based research design using firm-level data collected during 2024–2025 from 217 respondents in financial and managerial roles. Financial discipline and financial risk management are operationalized through multi-item Likert-scale proxies capturing cost control, financial policy discipline, risk identification, diversification, and strategic financial planning, while financial sustainability is measured through indicators reflecting long-term financial stability and the ability to meet financial obligations. The relationships are tested using covariance-based structural equation modeling (SEM), including mediation analysis. The results show that both financial discipline and financial risk management significantly enhance financial resilience capacity, which in turn exerts a strong positive effect on financial sustainability. Financial resilience capacity acts as the primary mechanism linking financial practices to sustainable outcomes. While financial discipline has both direct and indirect effects, the impact of financial risk management operates fully through financial resilience capacity. These findings highlight the critical role of resilience in translating financial practices into long-term financial sustainability.
Lulaj et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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