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Pollution and Capital Markets in Developing Countries
Authors:Susmita Dasgupta   Benoit Laplante  Nlandu Mamingi
Affiliation:a The World Bank, Development Research Group, 1818 H Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20433;b The University of the West Indies, Bridgetown, Barbados
Abstract:It is said that firms in developing countries do not have incentives to invest in pollution control because of weak implementation of environmental regulations. This argument assumes that the regulator is the only agent that can create incentives for pollution control, and ignores that capital markets, if properly informed, may provide the appropriate financial and reputational incentives. We show that capital markets in Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and the Philippines do react to announcements of environmental events, such as those of superior environmental performance or citizens' complaints. A policy implication is that environmental regulators in developing countries may explicitly harness those market forces by introducing structured programs of information release pertaining to firms' environmental performance: public disclosure mechanisms in developing countries may be a useful model to consider given limited government enforcement resources.
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