Brightening the dark side of environmental regulation: evidence from green revenues and greenwashing behaviors
Brightening the dark side of environmental regulation: evidence from green revenues and greenwashing behaviors
Unintended consequences of environmental regulations can diverge from their original goals, undermining the validity and effectiveness and potentially leading to new challenges separate from those originally targeted for resolution. This study addresses the hot-debated question of whether and how green revenues serve as a pivotal factor in mitigating the unintended consequences of stringent environmental regulations. Using a difference-in-differences model, we find firms significantly enhance their greenwashing practices after China’s Emission Trading Scheme (ETS). However, we document that ETS firms generating green revenues significantly reduce their greenwashing practices. We identify firms’ green awareness, ability for green innovations, and environmental transformation as the underlying mechanisms. Our findings align with the resource-based view and stakeholder theory. Our study provides policymakers and practitioners with ex ante evidence on how to mitigate the unintended consequences of environmental regulations, preserving their validity and effectiveness.
Cao, June
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Huang, Zijie
59d8a443-f69a-44bf-aa94-a1c550a17dd2
Kristanto, Ari Budi
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Cao, June
af0d62ff-d54c-412f-a152-cc04c63c7290
Huang, Zijie
59d8a443-f69a-44bf-aa94-a1c550a17dd2
Kristanto, Ari Budi
ae743fde-e92b-4129-a882-4e690efbd2d8
Cao, June, Huang, Zijie and Kristanto, Ari Budi
(2025)
Brightening the dark side of environmental regulation: evidence from green revenues and greenwashing behaviors.
Journal of International Accounting Research.
(doi:10.2308/JIAR-2024-025).
Abstract
Unintended consequences of environmental regulations can diverge from their original goals, undermining the validity and effectiveness and potentially leading to new challenges separate from those originally targeted for resolution. This study addresses the hot-debated question of whether and how green revenues serve as a pivotal factor in mitigating the unintended consequences of stringent environmental regulations. Using a difference-in-differences model, we find firms significantly enhance their greenwashing practices after China’s Emission Trading Scheme (ETS). However, we document that ETS firms generating green revenues significantly reduce their greenwashing practices. We identify firms’ green awareness, ability for green innovations, and environmental transformation as the underlying mechanisms. Our findings align with the resource-based view and stakeholder theory. Our study provides policymakers and practitioners with ex ante evidence on how to mitigate the unintended consequences of environmental regulations, preserving their validity and effectiveness.
Text
1 Brightening the Dark Side of Environmental Regulation-Evidence from Green Revenues and Greenwashing Behaviors
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 11 March 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 April 2025
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Local EPrints ID: 501373
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501373
PURE UUID: b7b906f4-c5af-4f9c-991a-699a12a6a90f
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Date deposited: 30 May 2025 16:35
Last modified: 22 Oct 2025 16:54
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Contributors
Author:
June Cao
Author:
Zijie Huang
Author:
Ari Budi Kristanto
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