Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province

China's approach to environmental regulation relies heavily on campaign-style enforcement and blunt-force regulation. While considered effective in the short run, this approach is often inefficient and generates unintended regulatory outcomes in the longer run. At the same time, China continues...

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Main Authors: XIANG, Chen, VAN GEVELT, Terry
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2022
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/67
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spelling sg-smu-ink.cis_research-10662023-01-19T07:48:03Z Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province XIANG, Chen VAN GEVELT, Terry China's approach to environmental regulation relies heavily on campaign-style enforcement and blunt-force regulation. While considered effective in the short run, this approach is often inefficient and generates unintended regulatory outcomes in the longer run. At the same time, China continues to experiment with the use of market-based approaches that are theoretically more efficient and have the potential to facilitate sustained reductions in carbon emissions. Arguably the most high-profile example is the Guangdong Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), which was launched in 2013 as a national pilot scheme. We construct a synthetic control of Guangdong and analyse 51,076 party-led newspaper reports to show that while the ETS reduced emissions in the short run, these reductions were systematically associated with political signalling. Notably, emissions reduced substantially upon the announcement of the ETS in 2011 – a full two years before the scheme was scheduled to begin – before rebounding to near pre-ETS announcement levels by 2017. The presence of an anticipation effect and the systematic association between political signalling and emissions reductions mirrors findings on China's more direct approaches to environmental regulation. Our findings suggest that market-based mechanisms in China may not be qualitatively different from more direct forms of environmental regulation. 2022-12-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/67 info:doi/10.1016/j.esd.2022.10.007 Research Collection College of Integrative Studies eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Political signalling Market-based mechanisms Emissions Trading Schemes Environmental regulation Guangdong China Energy Policy Environmental Policy
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Political signalling
Market-based mechanisms
Emissions Trading Schemes
Environmental regulation
Guangdong
China
Energy Policy
Environmental Policy
spellingShingle Political signalling
Market-based mechanisms
Emissions Trading Schemes
Environmental regulation
Guangdong
China
Energy Policy
Environmental Policy
XIANG, Chen
VAN GEVELT, Terry
Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province
description China's approach to environmental regulation relies heavily on campaign-style enforcement and blunt-force regulation. While considered effective in the short run, this approach is often inefficient and generates unintended regulatory outcomes in the longer run. At the same time, China continues to experiment with the use of market-based approaches that are theoretically more efficient and have the potential to facilitate sustained reductions in carbon emissions. Arguably the most high-profile example is the Guangdong Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), which was launched in 2013 as a national pilot scheme. We construct a synthetic control of Guangdong and analyse 51,076 party-led newspaper reports to show that while the ETS reduced emissions in the short run, these reductions were systematically associated with political signalling. Notably, emissions reduced substantially upon the announcement of the ETS in 2011 – a full two years before the scheme was scheduled to begin – before rebounding to near pre-ETS announcement levels by 2017. The presence of an anticipation effect and the systematic association between political signalling and emissions reductions mirrors findings on China's more direct approaches to environmental regulation. Our findings suggest that market-based mechanisms in China may not be qualitatively different from more direct forms of environmental regulation.
format text
author XIANG, Chen
VAN GEVELT, Terry
author_facet XIANG, Chen
VAN GEVELT, Terry
author_sort XIANG, Chen
title Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province
title_short Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province
title_full Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province
title_fullStr Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province
title_full_unstemmed Political signalling and emissions trading schemes in China: Insights from Guangdong Province
title_sort political signalling and emissions trading schemes in china: insights from guangdong province
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2022
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/67
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