The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneity

Firms in China within the same industry but with different ownership and size have different production functions and face different emission regulations and financial conditions, thus can give very different responses to environmental policies. This fact has been largely ignored in most of the low-...

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Main Authors: Wei-Qi Tang, Bo Meng, Li-Bo Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2020-06-01
Series:Advances in Climate Change Research
Subjects:
ETS
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674927820300307
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spelling doaj-528fcdbc4a9b4cd2979ad2f8991f50752021-04-02T12:47:18ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Advances in Climate Change Research1674-92782020-06-011127284The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneityWei-Qi Tang0Bo Meng1Li-Bo Wu2CIB Research, Shanghai, 200120, China; Center for Energy Economics and Strategy Studies, Fudan University, Shanghai, 200433, ChinaInstitute of Developing Economies – JETRO, Chiba, 2618545, Japan; Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research, Tokyo, 1066234, Japan; Corresponding author. Institute of Developing Economies – JETRO, Chiba, 2618545, Japan.Center for Energy Economics and Strategy Studies, Fudan University, Shanghai, 200433, China; School of Economics, Fudan University, Shanghai, 200433, ChinaFirms in China within the same industry but with different ownership and size have different production functions and face different emission regulations and financial conditions, thus can give very different responses to environmental policies. This fact has been largely ignored in most of the low-carbon development related literature. Using an augmented Chinese input–output table in which information about firm size (large- and small and medium-sized firms) and ownership (state-, foreign-, and private-owned firms) are explicitly reported, a dynamic computable general equilibrium model is developed in this study to analyze the impact of alternative low-carbon policy designs with different regulatory coverage and financial equalization on heterogeneous firms. Our simulation results show that, with the fully balanced regulation coverage and equalized financial system for heterogeneous firms, the total green investment accounts for 4% of GDP in 2030 for fulfilling China's commitment to reduce carbon emissions, which is the lowest among the various scenarios; about one-third of this investment is made by small and private firms; at the same time, green investment efficiency will be the highest, about 84% higher than that of the business-as-usual level. Therefore, a market-oriented and new technology-driven arrangement and mechanism for sharing emission reduction burden and allocating green investment across heterogeneous firms, especially to small and medium-sized firms, is crucial for China to achieve a more ambitious emission target in the long run.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674927820300307Small- and medium-sized enterprise (SME)Green financeFirm heterogeneityETSCO2 emissionsLow-carbon
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wei-Qi Tang
Bo Meng
Li-Bo Wu
spellingShingle Wei-Qi Tang
Bo Meng
Li-Bo Wu
The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneity
Advances in Climate Change Research
Small- and medium-sized enterprise (SME)
Green finance
Firm heterogeneity
ETS
CO2 emissions
Low-carbon
author_facet Wei-Qi Tang
Bo Meng
Li-Bo Wu
author_sort Wei-Qi Tang
title The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneity
title_short The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneity
title_full The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneity
title_fullStr The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneity
title_full_unstemmed The impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on China's low-carbon development: Considering firm heterogeneity
title_sort impact of regulatory and financial discrimination on china's low-carbon development: considering firm heterogeneity
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Advances in Climate Change Research
issn 1674-9278
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Firms in China within the same industry but with different ownership and size have different production functions and face different emission regulations and financial conditions, thus can give very different responses to environmental policies. This fact has been largely ignored in most of the low-carbon development related literature. Using an augmented Chinese input–output table in which information about firm size (large- and small and medium-sized firms) and ownership (state-, foreign-, and private-owned firms) are explicitly reported, a dynamic computable general equilibrium model is developed in this study to analyze the impact of alternative low-carbon policy designs with different regulatory coverage and financial equalization on heterogeneous firms. Our simulation results show that, with the fully balanced regulation coverage and equalized financial system for heterogeneous firms, the total green investment accounts for 4% of GDP in 2030 for fulfilling China's commitment to reduce carbon emissions, which is the lowest among the various scenarios; about one-third of this investment is made by small and private firms; at the same time, green investment efficiency will be the highest, about 84% higher than that of the business-as-usual level. Therefore, a market-oriented and new technology-driven arrangement and mechanism for sharing emission reduction burden and allocating green investment across heterogeneous firms, especially to small and medium-sized firms, is crucial for China to achieve a more ambitious emission target in the long run.
topic Small- and medium-sized enterprise (SME)
Green finance
Firm heterogeneity
ETS
CO2 emissions
Low-carbon
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674927820300307
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