Affiliation:
1. Business School Yangzhou University Yangzhou Jiangsu Province China
2. School of Economics, Hainan Open Economy Research Institute Hainan University Haikou Hainan Province China
3. School of Literature, Law, and Economics Wuhan University of Science and Technology Wuhan Hubei Province China
Abstract
AbstractGreen credit policy is designed to address the global climate risk. However, few studies have investigated empirically whether green credit policy indeed reduces corporate carbon emission intensity. Based on firm‐level data in China and a difference‐in‐differences model, this study explores how corporate carbon emission intensity evolves following the green credit policy. We find that, on the whole, the green credit can effectively reduce corporate carbon emission intensity, while the dynamic negative effect tends to alleviate after 2017. Specifically, green credit reduces corporate carbon emission intensity mainly through lowering investment carbon intensity and enhancing environmental supervision. However, the signaling mechanism of green credit does not significantly alleviate corporate carbon emission intensity. The green credit has a stronger reduction effect on corporate carbon emission intensity with third‐party certification, non‐state‐owned ownership, and high financing constraint. We thereby suggest that innovations should be made to the standards and processes of green credit to ensure sustainability and stability. Quantitative and standardized corporate environmental information disclosure is essential for the low‐carbon effect on green finance innovation.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Strategy and Management,Development
Cited by
36 articles.
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