International production chains and the pollution offshoring hypothesis:an empirical investigation
Most analyses of the impact of heterogeneous environmental policy stringency on the location of industrial firms have considered the relocation of entire activities – the well-known pollution haven hypothesis. Yet international enterprises may decide to only offshore a subset of their production chain – the so-called pollution offshoring hypothesis (POH). We introduce a simple empirical approach to test the POH combining a comprehensive industrial mergers and acquisitions dataset, a measure of sectoral linkages based on input-output tables and an index score of environmental policy stringency. Our results confirm the impact of relative environmental policy stringency on firms’ decisions to engage in cross-country M&As. Our findings also indicate that environmental taxation have a stronger impact on international investment decisions than standards-based policies. Further, we find that transactions involving a target firm operating in a sector upstream of the acquirer are more sensitive to environmental policy stringency, especially when that sector is highly pollution-intensive. This empirical evidence is consistent with the pollution offshoring hypothesis.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Keywords | FDI,pollution offshoring,global supply chain,firm location,environmental regulation,Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy grant (ES/R009708/1),Climate SOLSTICE project JUST-DECARB (ES/V013971/1),PRINZ (ES/W010356/1),Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship (ECF/2021/536),Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment |
| Departments | Grantham Research Institute |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.reseneeco.2023.101357 |
| Date Deposited | 06 Mar 2023 17:00 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/118352 |
