Abstract

"How does a firm's bankruptcy affect its regional environment?" is an open empirical question that has received little attention in the literature. We hypothesize that because enterprises provide funds to protect their regional environment, their default risk negatively impacts that environment. We analyze the impact of corporate default risk on environmental deterioration in the international setting to answer this question. Using a firm-level corporate default risk quarterly data from 2013q1 to 2020q4, we find that corporate default risk is positively associated with CO2 emissions and decomposed components. These findings are reliable in low-income and highly uncertain countries but weak in countries having more market competition. We also find that the negative impact of corporate default risk on the environment is more robust in countries with more population density and fewer forest area thresholds. Finally, using the instrumental variable approach, we provide preliminary evidence that firm-level political risk (for US and Canadian firms only) increases corporate default risk, leading to a degrading environment. Our findings are robust to alternative measurements of afirm's default risk and environmental deterioration. Our research will help environmental authorities to consider corporate default risk as a determinant when formulating environmental-related strategies.

Highlights

  • Industrial and manufacturing activities such as electric power usage, mining metal, refining oil and gas, chemicals for medicines, paints, clothing, and mobile tend to degrade the environment2 significantly

  • The result shows that the coefficient of KZ is positive and significant at a 1% level, denoting that a one percent increase in the KZ index is 2.19% increases the CO2 emission level

  • This study examines how the firm's default probability is linked with environmental degradation in the world's economies

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Summary

Introduction

Industrial and manufacturing activities such as electric power usage, mining metal, refining oil and gas, chemicals for medicines, paints, clothing, and mobile tend to degrade the environment significantly. If there is no strict regulation on industries to manage the toxic chemical waste, it will add noxious emission to the land, air, and water, and that would be the firm's operating contribution to the environmental deterioration (Levinson, 2015). We graphically sketch the CO2 emission at the country level in Appendix 3, 4, and 5. Appendix 3 postulates the CO2 emission at the country level by raw data. Appendix 4 sort the CO2 emission at country-level and find that China, U.S India, Russia, and Japan are the top five countries majorly CO2 emitter. We enlighten the CO2 emission at the regional level in Appendix 5 and find that North America is the proportionally large CO2 emitter internationally. The environmental protection strategies have been flouted when the country's market is prone to insolvencies and more default probabilities

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