4.4 Article

Foreign land acquisitions and environmental regulations: Does the pollution-haven effect hold?

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
Volume 73, Issue 1, Pages 172-194

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1477-9552.12441

Keywords

developing countries; environment; foreign land acquisitions; gravity model

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This paper investigates the impact of differences in environmental stringency between investing and target country on foreign land acquisitions (FLA). The study found that the wider the gap in environmental stringency, the higher the likelihood of FLA occurring.
The recent wave of foreign land acquisitions (FLA) has raised several concerns in terms of their environmental and social sustainability. An unexplored issue is whether pollution-haven mechanisms are driving the pattern of FLA. This paper investigates whether and how differences in environmental stringency between investing and target country affect the pattern of FLA. We estimate a panel gravity equation and use different indexes to measure the environmental stringency. Our results show that, by and large, differences in environmental stringency do affect FLA. The wider the gap in the environmental stringency between the investor and the target country, the higher is the number of firms investing abroad. Our results also show that the impact of environmental stringency differentials on FLA depends on the investor country and on corruption in the target country, and that in a number of estimations the choice over the index of stringency may be a relevant factor.

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