The effect of the policy mix of green credit and government subsidy on environmental innovation
The effect of the policy mix of green credit and government subsidy on environmental innovation
We examine to what extent ‘policy mix’ of green credit policy and government subsidy affects high-quality environmental innovation of high-polluting firms. The green credit policy is a special environmental regulation that guides the distribution of credit from banks. Using the difference-in-difference method, we find that Green Credit Guidelines (GCGs) have a negative impact on the high-quality environmental innovation of high-polluting firms in China. However, the negative relationship between GCGs and high-quality environmental innovation depends on the level of government subsidy. Subsidies can effectively correct the negative impact of GCGs. The mechanism analysis shows that GCGs hinder high-quality environmental innovation through two channels: (1) increase in compliance costs and (2) lack of long-term bank credit that supports environmental innovation. Government subsidies can play a moderating role in the second channel.
Ma, Yechi
dce502a3-cc4e-4537-9df5-044f2a58a436
Sha, Yezhou
66444927-17d8-4d96-b6e7-a4a9803cc4f8
Wang, Zilong
6a016dab-a836-4e00-a7a2-376f205185da
Zhang, Wenjing
9e7cb9f9-6e05-4c92-9885-f275e19a034e
16 January 2023
Ma, Yechi
dce502a3-cc4e-4537-9df5-044f2a58a436
Sha, Yezhou
66444927-17d8-4d96-b6e7-a4a9803cc4f8
Wang, Zilong
6a016dab-a836-4e00-a7a2-376f205185da
Zhang, Wenjing
9e7cb9f9-6e05-4c92-9885-f275e19a034e
Ma, Yechi, Sha, Yezhou, Wang, Zilong and Zhang, Wenjing
(2023)
The effect of the policy mix of green credit and government subsidy on environmental innovation.
Energy Economics, [106512].
(doi:10.1016/j.eneco.2023.106512).
Abstract
We examine to what extent ‘policy mix’ of green credit policy and government subsidy affects high-quality environmental innovation of high-polluting firms. The green credit policy is a special environmental regulation that guides the distribution of credit from banks. Using the difference-in-difference method, we find that Green Credit Guidelines (GCGs) have a negative impact on the high-quality environmental innovation of high-polluting firms in China. However, the negative relationship between GCGs and high-quality environmental innovation depends on the level of government subsidy. Subsidies can effectively correct the negative impact of GCGs. The mechanism analysis shows that GCGs hinder high-quality environmental innovation through two channels: (1) increase in compliance costs and (2) lack of long-term bank credit that supports environmental innovation. Government subsidies can play a moderating role in the second channel.
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 January 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 January 2023
Published date: 16 January 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 496394
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496394
ISSN: 0140-9883
PURE UUID: 8b117871-32a8-4782-8e85-d4a3f10ec9c5
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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2024 18:17
Last modified: 13 Dec 2024 17:59
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Author:
Yechi Ma
Author:
Yezhou Sha
Author:
Zilong Wang
Author:
Wenjing Zhang
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