Firm Decision-making Structure and Compliance with Environmental Regulations: Evidence from Environmental Auditing
We explore how limits to our insight on the underlying decision-making structure of regulated entities may affect the conclusions we draw about the likely impacts of environmental policies, with a focus on environmental auditing. We examine the conditions under which a multi-facility firm chooses to adopt a standardized auditing. Our firm-level empirical analysis confirms that a uniform auditing outcome is less likely among firms (1) with a more heterogeneous portfolio of facilities, and (2) that are less likely to make decision errors. We examine the implications of adding controls for firm decision-making structure in a facility-level empirical analysis of auditing’s impact on compliance. Our results suggest that the estimated compliance impact of auditing varies depending on whether or not we include these controls.
Year of publication: |
2012-08-25
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Authors: | Evans, Mary F. ; Liu, Lirong ; Stafford, Sarah L. |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, College of William & Mary |
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