Abstract

Climate change, global warming, and carbon emission are global issues. Countries are strengthening their environmental regulations to mitigate the emission problem. According to the pollution haven hypothesis, rich countries invest in emerging economies where the institutional framework is weak to migrate the emissions. With this background, this study examines the impact of the introduction of the carbon tax in India and environmental regulation restriction distance on India’s inbound cross-border mergers and acquisitions (a form of foreign direct investment) volume using a 979 country-pair-year observation sample. The Tobit regression model findings suggest that carbon tax introduction and environmental regulation distance negatively impact India’s inbound cross-border mergers and acquisitions volume. Furthermore, control of corruption intensifies its impact by effectively moderating them. The results indicate that India can avoid becoming a pollution haven by strengthening its environmental policies and controlling corruption. These results provide insight into strengthening the policies relating to environmental regulations and continuing the efforts required to control corruption in India.

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