Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 9th May 2025, 03:50:14pm CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
CL 07: Sustainable investment preferences
Time:
Saturday, 24/Aug/2024:
9:00am - 10:30am

Session Chair: Paul Smeets, University of Amsterdam
Location: Radisson | Carlton Hall


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Presentations
ID: 723

Climate Polarization and Green Investment

Anders Anderson1, David T. R2

1Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden; 2Fuqua School of Business, Duke University, US

Discussant: Laura Starks (The University of Texas at Austin)

We build a nationally representative sample of retirement savers in Sweden to study how climate polarizaton affects individual investment decisions. After the record-breaking heat wave of 2018, respondents in regions with strong support for a right-wing, anti-climate party grow less concerned about climate change, while respondents outside these regions grow more concerned. Those growing more concerned rebalance their retirement portfolios toward climate-friendly mutual funds; those growing less concerned rebalance out of these funds, but to a smaller degree. Financial sophistication and inertia interact with political polarization in driving these effects.

EFA2024_723_CL 07_Climate Polarization and Green Investment.pdf


ID: 988

Green Investing and Political Behavior

Florian Heeb4,1, Julian F. Koelbel2,1, Stefano Ramelli2, Anna Vasileva3

1MIT; 2University of St.Gallen (HSG), Switzerland; 3Univesity of Zurich, Switzerland; 4Goethe University Frankfurt

Discussant: Gunnar Gutsche (University of Kassel)

A major concern regarding green investing is that it may crowd out political support for government interventions targeting negative externalities. We test the validity of this concern in a preregistered experiment shortly before a real referendum on a climate law with a representative sample of the Swiss population (N = 2,051). We find that the opportunity to invest in a climate-conscious fund does not reduce individuals’ support for climate regulation. Our experimental results are consistent with actual voting and donation behavior across Switzerland. We conclude that the spillover effects of sustainable investing on individual political behavior are limited.

EFA2024_988_CL 07_Green Investing and Political Behavior.pdf


ID: 1261

Corporate Capture of Congress in Carbon Politics: Evidence from Roll Call Votes

Meng Gao1, Jiekun Huang2

1University of Connecticut; 2University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Discussant: Florian Heeb (Leibniz Institute for Financial Research SAFE)

How special interests shape legislative decisions is a fundamental question in political economy. In this paper, we examine the influence of carbon-emitting corporations on legislative voting behavior on climate issues and the impact of the votes on firm value. Using a comprehensive sample of votes on contested climate legislation in the US House of Representatives and Senate, we find that politicians with high carbon dependency—those receiving more campaign contributions from carbon-emitting firms—are more likely to cast climate-skeptic votes. This relation is stronger when politicians face greater electoral pressure. Using the redistribution of campaign contributions following the narrow defeat of incumbent representatives to generate plausibly exogenous shocks to their elected peers' carbon dependency, we find that the relation is likely causal. We further find evidence that carbon-emitting firms benefit from their connected politicians casting climate-skeptic votes.

EFA2024_1261_CL 07_Corporate Capture of Congress in Carbon Politics.pdf


 
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