Litcius/Paper detail

Does air pollution change a firm's business strategy for employing capital and labor?

Baohua Liu, Junfeng Wu, Kam C. Chan

2021Business Strategy and the Environment33 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract We examine the impact of air pollution on a firm's capital‐labor ratio. We propose the hypothesis that, in dealing with air pollution, a firm responds strategically by using relatively more capital and less labor to contain labor costs and remain competitive in the market. Using a sample of Chinese firms and a satellite‐based air pollution metric, we test this hypothesis, and our results confirm it. In addition, we document that the impact of air pollution on the capital‐labor ratio is more salient for firms with high economic incentives and close monitoring. Further, we report that to respond to worsening air pollution, a firm uses more capital and substitutes lower‐quality labor with more high‐quality labor. Finally, after increasing the capital‐labor ratio, a firm's value increases, in terms of Tobin's Q, suggesting that the adoption of a higher capital‐labor ratio, due to air pollution, is a sound business strategy.

Topics & Concepts

Capital (architecture)PollutionEconomicsIncentiveAir pollutionLabour economicsBusinessMicroeconomicsChemistryArchaeologyEcologyOrganic chemistryBiologyHistoryAir Quality and Health ImpactsEnergy, Environment, Economic GrowthAviation Industry Analysis and Trends
Does air pollution change a firm's business strategy for employing capital and labor? | Litcius