Emissions Trading Schemes and Directed Technological Change: Evidence from China
Abstract
This paper examines the impact of carbon emissions trading schemes (ETS) on technical change proxied by the number of green patents in the context of the pilot ETS in China. I find a small increase of 0.16 patents per firm and year. A 10 percent increase in
carbon prices increases green patents by 2 percent. The strongest effects are for the two
regions in the upper range of carbon prices and for more productive firms. However, there
are contrasting patterns at the extensive and intensive margins of green innovation: the
pilot ETS reduces entry into green innovative activities but increases levels of innovating
for firms that were innovative before they were regulated by ETS, especially for the more
productive firms. This indicates that an important policy challenge is to encourage the firms covered by ETS to start innovation in green technologies; this applies particularly to the larger and more productive firms.
Other description
JEL Classification: Q54, Q55, O44, O33
Collections
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Date
2020-11Author
Tian, Ruijie
Keywords
Carbon Pricing
Directed Technological Change
Innovation
Heterogeneous Firms
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
797
Language
eng