Abstract

Green credit policy is an important practice to guide green development through the rational allocation of credit funds. Using the promulgation of the "Green Credit Guidelines" policy in China as a quasi-natural experiment, this paper examines the impact of green credit policy on heavily polluting enterprises' substantive and strategic green innovations within a difference-in-differences framework. We find that green credit policy improves the overall and strategic green innovations but has no significant effect on substantive green innovation of heavily polluting enterprises. Moreover, this effect is more prominent for state-owned enterprises and enterprises in regions with lower levels of financial development. Further analysis demonstrates that the green innovation induced by green credit policy increases heavily polluting enterprises' loan availability but does not improve heavily polluting enterprises' value. This paper sheds new light on the relationship between green credit policy and corporate green innovation in China as a transition economy.

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