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How government procurement shapes corporate climate disclosures, commitments, and actions

Omri Even-Tov1; Guoman She2; Lynn Linghuan Wang2; DY Yang3,2

1 University of California, Berkeley · 2 University of Hong Kong · 3 Fudan University

Review of Accounting Studies 2025 open access

Abstract This study examines how government procurement impacts firms’ environmental disclosures and whether they have tangible effects. Using a triple-difference research design that exploits the exogenous increase in federal funding allocations to counties based on population census revisions, we find that firms with high exposure to government contracts significantly increase climate disclosure following expanded procurement opportunities. We also document that enhanced disclosure is characterized by a positive tone that emphasizes firms’ green investment and commitment to climate adaptation. The effect is more pronounced in counties with a greater increase in procurement volume and when firms have lower ex ante sustainability performance. Finally, we find firms that increase climate disclosure are more likely to earn government contracts, and they undertake real actions by reducing toxic emissions and enhancing the development of green products. Overall our results suggest government procurement promotes corporate climate responsibility by incentivizing firms to undertake climate mitigation actions.

DOI
10.1007/s11142-024-09866-0
Volume
30 (2)
Pages
1968-2014
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
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