4.7 Article

Corruption pays off: How environmental regulations promote corporate innovation in a developing country

期刊

ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
卷 183, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.106969

关键词

China; Corporate innovation; Corruption; Environmental regulat ion

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71563013, 71763009]
  2. Education Department of Jiangxi Province [GJJ190277]

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This study found that the stringency of environmental regulations in China only promotes corporate innovation when interacted with regions with high corruption, with bribery expenditures playing a mediating role. The research further confirms that corruption is the key mechanism in the Porter effect in developing countries.
The Porter hypothesis asserts that well-designed regulations can foster innovation for a ?win-win? solution, but it requires environmental regulations to be strict but flexible, which is impractical for most developing countries. This paper explores how environmental regulations in a developing country can spur corporate innovation. Using the geographic distribution of wars during 1644 and 1911 as an instrument, we document that the stringency of environmental regulations in China promotes corporate innovation only when interacted with a region with high corruption. We further identify that the causal effect of the stringency on corporate innovation is mediated by bribery expenditures statistically and economically, and all the corresponding direct effects are insignificant. Ultimately, this paper confirms that corruption is the key mechanism in the Porter effect in a developing country.

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