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Exploring the catalysts of eco-innovation: employee ownership and sustainable practices

Exploring the catalysts of eco-innovation: employee ownership and sustainable practices
Exploring the catalysts of eco-innovation: employee ownership and sustainable practices
Climate change is a critical and urgent issue worldwide. Green innovation is a key means of abating carbon emissions. Our study investigates whether and how employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) affect corporate green innovation. Using a powerful difference-in-differences approach, we provide causal evidence of the positive effect of ESOPs on corporate green innovation. Our baseline results are robust after addressing potential endogeneity issues using an entropy balancing technique, a Heckman two-stage model, and a placebo test, and after including an industry effect and different model specifications. Our channel analyses reveal that ESOPs mainly promote green innovation through increased risk-taking ability and employee productivity in green innovation. We find that the positive effects are more pronounced when firms are not state-owned, have less powerful CEOs, and are in heavily polluting industries. In addition, we find that companies with increased green innovation after adopting ESOPs have better environmental performance than other firms.
0040-1625
Liu, Wenjun
9218c8b2-50dd-4df0-94ad-3c88cb32cab6
He, Qian
f6133097-1dd9-4f50-9797-84652e767926
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
Kamar, Amina
7758ec4a-01ba-4bef-8a3f-1364d247ec3d
Liu, Wenjun
9218c8b2-50dd-4df0-94ad-3c88cb32cab6
He, Qian
f6133097-1dd9-4f50-9797-84652e767926
Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
Kamar, Amina
7758ec4a-01ba-4bef-8a3f-1364d247ec3d

Liu, Wenjun, He, Qian, Cao, June and Kamar, Amina (2024) Exploring the catalysts of eco-innovation: employee ownership and sustainable practices. Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 207, [123629]. (doi:10.1016/j.techfore.2024.123629).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Climate change is a critical and urgent issue worldwide. Green innovation is a key means of abating carbon emissions. Our study investigates whether and how employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) affect corporate green innovation. Using a powerful difference-in-differences approach, we provide causal evidence of the positive effect of ESOPs on corporate green innovation. Our baseline results are robust after addressing potential endogeneity issues using an entropy balancing technique, a Heckman two-stage model, and a placebo test, and after including an industry effect and different model specifications. Our channel analyses reveal that ESOPs mainly promote green innovation through increased risk-taking ability and employee productivity in green innovation. We find that the positive effects are more pronounced when firms are not state-owned, have less powerful CEOs, and are in heavily polluting industries. In addition, we find that companies with increased green innovation after adopting ESOPs have better environmental performance than other firms.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 25 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 August 2024
Published date: 9 August 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501369
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501369
ISSN: 0040-1625
PURE UUID: 56420e5d-0b4a-4bfc-992e-1c3d5ead24f3
ORCID for June Cao: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2981-4174

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 30 May 2025 16:35
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Wenjun Liu
Author: Qian He
Author: June Cao ORCID iD
Author: Amina Kamar

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