Can Green Needs Always Promote Green Innovation? Moral Licensing in Corporate Environmental Responsibility
Heng Zhang () and
Binglin Gong ()
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Heng Zhang: East China Normal University
Binglin Gong: East China Normal University
Journal of Business Ethics, 2025, vol. 201, issue 1, No 9, 169-191
Abstract:
Abstract Recent research indicates that environmentally responsible stakeholders’ green needs and practices effectively enhance substantive or symbolic corporate environmental responsibility. However, few studies have noted the potential for these green needs and practices to backfire. We integrate moral licensing theory and upper echelons theory to develop a theoretical framework. This framework can predict the differential effects of stakeholders’ green needs on corporate green innovation, contingent on the moral credits that these needs confer upon executives. The evidence comes from the practice of green bond issuance by listed firms and a quasi-natural experiment of China’s environmental tax policy. We find that a 1% increase in the regional environmental protection tax is associated with a 0.036% decrease in a firm’s green innovation. Conversely, a 1% increase in green bond issuance corresponds to a 0.020% increase in a firm’s green innovation. Moreover, these effects are enhanced when managerial discretion is high and mitigated in firms with prosocial executives. Our findings suggest that executives engage in moral mental accounting/balancing, and thus treat stakeholders’ green needs differently.
Keywords: Corporate environmental responsibility; Executives moral accounting; Moral licensing theory; Upper echelons theory (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1007/s10551-024-05885-8
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