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Environmental regulation and corporate R&D investment—evidence from a quasi-natural experiment

Environmental regulation and corporate R&D investment—evidence from a quasi-natural experiment
Environmental regulation and corporate R&D investment—evidence from a quasi-natural experiment
The question of whether environmental regulation stimulates innovation activities has long been important and controversial. This study explores an ideal setting, the low-carbon city pilot program conducted by the Chinese government as a quasi-natural experiment to address this question. We conduct a difference-in-differences approach to analyze the impact of environment regulation on R&D investment. We find that the program’s adoption has led to an increase in R&D investment of 0.145% as a percentage of total assets and 0.273% as a percentage of sales, indicating a positive effect of environmental regulation on R&D expenditures. The increase in R&D expenditures is greater for firms experiencing a larger increase in government subsidies, a greater decline in corporate tax or a greater improvement in financial condition following the low-carbon pilot program. A series of robustness tests support a causal interpretation of our findings and indicate that the observed effect of the low-carbon pilot program on corporate R&D investment is unlikely driven by chance. Our results provide in-depth insights into the economic consequences of low-carbon regulation policies which could be of interest to academic researchers and policymakers.
1059-0560
154-174
Huang, Jingchang
5bba76f8-a33a-4151-970e-e96c83e271ed
Zhao, Jing
d4b30d5e-4ee6-48bb-8e39-99f197f301dc
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
Huang, Jingchang
5bba76f8-a33a-4151-970e-e96c83e271ed
Zhao, Jing
d4b30d5e-4ee6-48bb-8e39-99f197f301dc
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290

Huang, Jingchang, Zhao, Jing and Cao, June (2020) Environmental regulation and corporate R&D investment—evidence from a quasi-natural experiment. International Review of Economics and Finance, 72, 154-174. (doi:10.1016/j.iref.2020.11.018).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The question of whether environmental regulation stimulates innovation activities has long been important and controversial. This study explores an ideal setting, the low-carbon city pilot program conducted by the Chinese government as a quasi-natural experiment to address this question. We conduct a difference-in-differences approach to analyze the impact of environment regulation on R&D investment. We find that the program’s adoption has led to an increase in R&D investment of 0.145% as a percentage of total assets and 0.273% as a percentage of sales, indicating a positive effect of environmental regulation on R&D expenditures. The increase in R&D expenditures is greater for firms experiencing a larger increase in government subsidies, a greater decline in corporate tax or a greater improvement in financial condition following the low-carbon pilot program. A series of robustness tests support a causal interpretation of our findings and indicate that the observed effect of the low-carbon pilot program on corporate R&D investment is unlikely driven by chance. Our results provide in-depth insights into the economic consequences of low-carbon regulation policies which could be of interest to academic researchers and policymakers.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 November 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 December 2020
Published date: 11 December 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500842
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500842
ISSN: 1059-0560
PURE UUID: 49f7abb4-9ba5-4749-91dc-db7b972d87cd
ORCID for June Cao: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2981-4174

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Date deposited: 14 May 2025 16:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Jingchang Huang
Author: Jing Zhao
Author: June Cao ORCID iD

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