4.7 Article

Factor reallocation and cost pass-through under the carbon emission trading policy: Evidence from Chinese metal industrial chain

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 313, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.114924

Keywords

Carbon emission trading; Factor reallocation; Cost pass-through; Export benefits; Metal industrial chain

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [71874207]
  2. Annual Innovation-driven Project in Central South University [2019CX016]
  3. project of High-end Think Tank of Central South University [2021znzk01]
  4. Key Project of Think Tank in Hunan Province [18ZWB19]
  5. Major Project of National Social Science Fund [18ZDA049, 18ZDA061, 21ZD103]

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This paper examines the impact of China's carbon emission trading policy on the metal industrial chain and finds that midstream firms increase capital investment to cope with compliance costs, leading to losses in both revenue and quantity for upstream and downstream firms. However, precision machine manufacturing has seen export growth due to its sensitivity to technological breakthroughs.
Piloted in 2013, the Carbon Emission Trading (CET) policy is the most practical tool for emission reduction in China, however, midstream firms increase capital investment to cope with compliance costs, resulting in more expensive intermediate commodities that may hurt export benefits of industrial chain terminal. Based on the Ashared listed firms of Chinese metal industrial chain during 2008-2018, this paper applies the difference-indifference model to explore the effects of CET on chain reactions of corporate activities. After a set of robustness tests, the results show that midstream firms accelerate capital deepening in response to CET and become more capital-intensive, but gain losses of outputs both in revenue and in quantity, accompanying cost passthrough to downstream firms, which are all contributed by the external pressure imposed by stakeholders and internal incentive from senior managers. Then, affected by price fluctuation in markets of production factors and carbon-intensive commodities, CET increases the cleanliness standards of midstream firms and promote their export benefits immediately, and cost pass-through generates more expensive intermediate products and results in export contraction of downstream firms, but precision machine manufacturing has seen export growth, as their products are more sensitive to technological breakthroughs than material costs.

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