Essays on the Competitiveness Impacts of Environmental and Industrial Policies

Published In: dissertation | Share

  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share by Email
  • On the 5th of December, Maria Wang, will defend her doctoral dissertation “Essays on the Competitiveness Impacts of Environmental and Industrial Policies”.

    Maria Wang’s doctoral dissertation is a collection of three empirical essays in the fields of environmental economics and industrial organization. The essays investigate the impacts of environmental policy on manufacturing sector competitiveness, with a particular focus on the European Union Emissions Trading System (EU ETS).

    The first essay, written together with Tero Kuusi, studies a key concern of the EU ETS—carbon leakage. Carbon leakage means the relocation of production capacity to regions outside regulation, in this case the EU. By examining international trade flows, the study assesses whether carbon-intensive imports to EU ETS countries have increased since the system’s implementation, indicating a shift in production to countries not bound by the regulation. Using a gravity model and a comprehensive country and sector level dataset from 2000 to 2018, the essay finds evidence of carbon leakage, with a moderate increase in carbon content in imports.

    The second essay evaluates the effectiveness of the EU ETS indirect cost compensation subsidy, which aims to offset electricity cost increases due to the ETS for energy-intensive industries. Focusing on manufacturing plants in Finland, the analysis reveals no improvement in plant competitiveness metrics for subsidy recipients. The subsidy does not therefore appear to have reached its intended purpose. Furthermore, the subsidy recipients are large plants that in some cases produce their own electricity and even sell it, which raises questions about why they received the subsidy in the first place.

    The third essay, a joint work with Marita Laukkanen and Kimmo Ollikka, explores the broader effects of the EU ETS on plant-level performance within the Finnish manufacturing sector. Using data spanning from 1995 to 2019, the essay examines key indicators such as production value, wages, and employment. The results suggest that the EU ETS has neither significantly hindered nor enhanced the competitiveness of manufacturing plants. While emission reductions were observed in EU ETS plants, the study finds no significant impact on the financial performance of regulated firms

    Maria Wang

    Contact Maria Wang

    Email: maria.wang@hanken.fi
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mariamwang/