4.6 Article

Economic Policy Uncertainty and Climate Change: Evidence from CO2 Emission

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10551-023-05389-x

Keywords

Economic policy uncertainty; Climate change; Environmental performance; CO2 emissions

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In this paper, the authors investigate the impact of Economic Policy Uncertainty (EPU) on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Utilizing a large dataset from 23 countries and various econometric techniques, the study finds strong evidence that EPU increases firms' CO2 emissions. Furthermore, the analysis reveals that board characteristics and cross-country factors also play a significant role in moderating this relationship.
In this paper, we study the relationship between Economic Policy Uncertainty (EPU) and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Using an extensive dataset from 23 countries consisting of 6800 firm-year observations, we provide strong evidence that EPU increases firms' CO2 emissions. Our main inference is robust when using alternative measures of CO2 emissions and EPU, alternative econometric specifications and samples, and several approaches to control for possible endogeneity. In a set of additional analyses, we first show that a board's characteristics (i.e., board gender diversity and board independence) significantly moderate the studied relationship. Second, cross-country characteristics (i.e., government effectiveness, control of corruption, and democracy) seem important in the relationship between EPU and CO2 emissions. Our findings significantly contribute to the debate on firms' ethical responsibility in managing climate change and CO2 emissions.

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