Publication | Open Access
Can More Environmental Information Disclosure Lead to Higher Eco-Efficiency? Evidence from China
28
Citations
53
References
2018
Year
Environmental PerformanceResource EfficiencyEngineeringIntegrated ReportingEnvironmental Impact AssessmentSustainable DevelopmentApplied EconometricsEnvironmental EconomicsPanel DataEnvironmental PolicyProductivityEconomic Policy AnalysisQuantile RegressionEco-efficiencyEconomic AnalysisStatisticsEconomicsHigher Eco-efficiencyAccountingCorporate Social ResponsibilityInformation ManagementSuper EfficiencyNon-financial ReportingNational EconomiesEconometric ModelBusinessEconometricsPanel Threshold ModelEnergy Economics
The present paper investigates the impact of pollution information transparency index (PITI) on eco-efficiency using a novel panel dataset covering 109 key environmental protection prefecture-level cities in China over the period 2008–2015. We apply an extended data envelopment analysis (DEA) model, simultaneously incorporating metafrontier, undesirable outputs and super efficiency into slack-based measure (Meta-US-SBM) to estimate eco-efficiency. Then, the bootstrap Granger causality approach is utilized to test the unidirectional Granger causal relationship running from PITI to eco-efficiency. Results of DEA model show that there exist significant spatiotemporal disparities of eco-efficiency, on average, the eco-efficiency in eastern region is relative higher than those of central/western region. Estimates of ordinary least square (OLS) method, quantile regression, and spatial Durbin model document that the evidence of an inverted-U-shaped relation between PITI and eco-efficiency is supported, and the turning points vary from 0.3370 to 0.4540 with different model specifications. Finally, supplementary analysis of panel threshold model also supports the robust findings. Policy implications are presented based on the empirical results.
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