Does Environmental Regulation Indirectly Induce Upstream Innovation? New Evidence from India

Pavel Chakraborty, Chirantan Chatterjee
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引用次数: 172

Abstract

Exploiting a quasi-natural experiment, which involves the imposition of a ban by Germany in 1994 on an input (‘Azo-dyes’) used by the Indian leather and textile industries, we estimate the indirect impact of the environmental regulation on innovation activities of upstream (dye-producing) firms in India and examine how it varies by different firm characteristics: size and ownership. We find robust evidence of a significant increase (11–61%) in innovation expenditure for the dye-makers in response to the ‘Azo-dyes’ ban. Additionally, we find: (i) increase in technology transfer to the tune of 1.2–2.5 times more than that of internal RD (ii) increase in innovation expenditure with firm size; (iii) domestic firms investing more in technology transfer as compared to R&D, whereas foreign firms only undertaking the latter and (iv) decrease in investments towards innovation by downstream firms, thereby pointing towards a possible substitution effect in aggregate innovation by upstream firms. Our results are consistent with a variety of estimation methods and robustness checks.
环境规制是否间接诱导上游创新?来自印度的新证据
利用一项准自然实验,其中涉及1994年德国对印度皮革和纺织工业使用的一种投入物(“偶氮染料”)实施禁令,我们估计了环境监管对印度上游(染料生产)公司创新活动的间接影响,并研究了不同公司特征(规模和所有权)对环境监管的影响。我们发现有力的证据表明,染料制造商在应对“偶氮染料”禁令时,创新支出显著增加(11-61%)。此外,我们发现:(1)技术转移的增长是内部研发的1.2 ~ 2.5倍;(2)创新支出随企业规模的增加而增加;(3)与研发相比,国内企业在技术转让方面的投资更多,而外国企业只进行研发;(4)下游企业在创新方面的投资减少,从而表明上游企业在总创新中可能存在替代效应。我们的结果与各种估计方法和鲁棒性检查一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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