Leveraging the capabilities of multinational firms to address climate change: a finance perspective
File(s)Allen-ea_JIBS_15Sept'24.pdf (588 KB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Allen, Harry
Barbalau, Adelina
Chavez, Erik
Federica, Zeni
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Climate change and the associated issue of curbing carbon emissions has risen on the agenda of policymakers worldwide. However, global coordination on matters such as harmonized regulation has been subject to significant political frictions and the large intergovernmental transfers needed to finance the transition of developing economies have proven hard to raise. Recently, there have been considerable responses to climate change from the private sector, with stakeholders placing more pressure on firms, and financial markets mobilizing increasing more capital towards the reduction of negative externalities. We argue that although multinational enterprises (MNEs) have been a major contributor to the problem, they can be an important part of the solution - they have unique features that enable them to play an important role in the fight against climate change. MNEs have extensive and efficient internal markets
for governance, financing and technology, that enable them to circumvent country-specific frictions to climate action such as heterogeneous regulation, corruption, and the lack of technology. We analyze how different public and private incentive mechanisms could be designed to leverage MNEs’ unique features, realign their incentives and engage their potential to play a role in decarbonizing the economy. Lastly, we discuss challenges, opportunities and future research.
for governance, financing and technology, that enable them to circumvent country-specific frictions to climate action such as heterogeneous regulation, corruption, and the lack of technology. We analyze how different public and private incentive mechanisms could be designed to leverage MNEs’ unique features, realign their incentives and engage their potential to play a role in decarbonizing the economy. Lastly, we discuss challenges, opportunities and future research.
Date Acceptance
2024-09-09
Citation
Journal of International Business Studies
ISSN
0047-2506
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Journal / Book Title
Journal of International Business Studies
Copyright Statement
Copyright This paper is embargoed until publication. Once published the author’s accepted manuscript will be made available under a CC-BY License in accordance with Imperial’s Research Publications Open Access policy (www.imperial.ac.uk/oa-policy).
License URL
Publication Status
Accepted
Rights Embargo Date
10000-01-01