Empirical Evidence on Environmental Performance and Operating Costs

Dreyer Christian, Guenster Nadja, Koegst Jakob


Abstract
Theoretical arguments suggest that better environmental performance can lead to cost advantages through a more efficient use of resources and higher labor productivity. To provide empirical support for these arguments, we investigate how environmental performance affects operating costs using a sample of 785 U.S. firms for the period 2006-2014. We find that better environmental performance is negatively associated with direct production costs, but increases overhead costs. Because direct production costs have a larger impact than overhead costs, aggregate operating costs decline as environmental performance improves. To deal with endogeneity and to interpret the results causally, we use an instrumental variables approach

Keywords
environmental performance; natural-resource-based view; operating costs; overhead costs; production costs; environmental management systems; resource efficiency



Publication type
Research article (journal)

Peer reviewed
Yes

Publication status
Published

Year
2019

Journal
Sustainability

Volume
11

Issue
13

Language
English

ISSN
2071-1050

DOI

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