scholarly journals Does financing constraints impact the Chinese companies’ pollutants emissions? Evidence from a sample Selection Bias Corrected Model Based on Chinese Company-level Panel Data

Author(s):  
Xiaoguang Zhou ◽  
Xinmeng Tang

Abstract Most Chinese companies face financing constraints and thus lack sufficient funding for operations and investments that would better control their pollutant emissions. A sample selection bias corrected model is constructed to study the impact of financing constraints on the Chinese companies’ pollutant emissions using company-level emissions data. The empirical results revealed that financing constraints increase the pollutant emissions of the Chinese companies, including the emissions of industrial wastewater, industrial solid waste and sulfur dioxide. The heterogeneity analysis showed that the impacts of financing constraints on the pollutant emissions of companies operating in highly polluting industries and non-state-owned companies are more significant. And compared with internal financing, bank financing can better mitigate the impact of financing constraints on pollutant emissions through green loan projects. The results are stable after controlling for other important company factors and testing the robustness using the subdivided regression. Several political implications are drawn based on these findings that can help control the pollutant emissions of Chinese companies from the perspective of financing constraints.

Author(s):  
Pham The Anh

This research quantifies the impact of foreign direct investment (FDI) on the export  decisions of Vietnamese  enterprises. To control the problem of sample selection bias, this study employs the Heckman model (1979) estimated for two equations on export participation and rate. Unlike previous researches, which mainly rely on one single proxy of FDI, this research adopts sensititivy analysis through the estimation of a model with two representative variables for FDI. It is indicated that FDI has a positive impact on the export decisions of Vietnamese enterprises. Nonetheless, FDI has an insignificant effect on the export rate of Vietnamese enterprises.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 351-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Breen ◽  
Seungsoo Choi ◽  
Anders Holm

Author(s):  
Tao Lu ◽  
Ruimin Hu ◽  
Zhen Han ◽  
Junjun Jiang ◽  
Jun Chang

2019 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. 1154-1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Howard Bodenhorn ◽  
Timothy W. Guinnane ◽  
Thomas A. Mroz

Our 2017 article in this Journal stresses the pitfalls of using choice-based samples in economic history. A prominent example is the literature addressing the so-called antebellum puzzle. Heights researchers claim that Americans grew shorter in the first half of the nineteenth century, a period of robust economic growth. We argue that this result relies on choice-based samples. Without knowing the process that led to inclusion in the sample, researchers cannot properly estimate conditional mean heights. We proposed a diagnostic that can detect, but not correct for, selection bias. Komlos and A’Hearn’s interpretation of our analysis confuses diagnosis with cure. We dispute their view that selection bias has been appreciated in the heights literature.


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