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Decarbonization in Financial Turbulent Times: Global Value Chains and Regulatory Framework

金融混乱期の脱炭素化:グローバル・バリューチェーンと規制枠組み (AI 翻訳)

Xiaoyong Xu, Lu Zhang, Kingsley Imandojemu, Felix Orole, Romanus Osabohien

Business Strategy and the Environment📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-06-18#サプライチェーン経営インパクト: 調達リスク対象セクター: cross_sector
DOI: 10.1002/bse.71099
原典: https://doi.org/10.1002/bse.71099
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🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本研究は、金融混乱下でのグローバル・バリューチェーン(GVC)参加が炭素排出に与える影響を、153カ国のパネルデータと分位自己回帰分布ラグモデルを用いて分析。GVC参加は短・長期ともに排出を増加させ、特に高排出国で効果が大きい。金融危機は短期的に排出を減少させるが、長期的には炭素集約的な状況で排出増加の可能性がある。規制の質は長期的に排出を抑制する。

English

This study examines how global value chain (GVC) participation affects carbon emissions during financial turbulence using panel data from 153 countries and a quantile autoregressive distributed lag model. Deeper GVC participation consistently increases emissions in both the short and long run, with stronger effects at higher emission quantiles. Financial crises reduce emissions in the short run but may increase them in the long run, especially in carbon-intensive contexts. Regulatory quality mitigates emissions over time, highlighting the role of governance in environmental outcomes.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本企業にとって、グローバルサプライチェーンにおける炭素リスクの埋め込みを認識し、金融危機時でも排出削減を維持するための制度的枠組みの重要性を示す。サプライチェーン全体の環境ガバナンス強化が求められる。

In the global GX context

For global audiences, this paper integrates GVC dynamics, financial instability, and institutional quality into a unified empirical framework, offering insights for supply chain decarbonization strategies and environmental governance. It underscores that trade integration can increase carbon dependence unless accompanied by strong regulatory oversight.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides empirical evidence on heterogeneous effects of GVC participation on emissions across crisis and regulatory contexts, useful for trade-environment research.

🏢実務担当者:Highlights that international supply chain integration can embed carbon risks, requiring deliberate upgrading and cleaner sourcing to mitigate emissions.

🏛政策担当者:Suggests that regulatory quality is crucial for long-run emission reductions, especially during financial crises, informing trade and environmental policy design.

📄 Abstract(原文)

ABSTRACT This study examines how participation in global value chains (GVCs) influences carbon emissions amid financial turbulence, with attention to cross‐country heterogeneity and distributional dynamics. Although existing research has explored trade–environment linkages, limited attention has been given to how GVC integration interacts with financial crises and institutional quality across different emission regimes. Addressing this gap, the study employs a balanced panel of 153 countries and models emissions using total CO 2 output (excluding LULUCF). Financial turbulence is captured through banking, currency, and sovereign debt crises, whereas regulatory quality reflects institutional capacity. Using a panel quantile autoregressive distributed lag framework, the analysis reveals that deeper GVC participation consistently increases emissions in both the short and long run, with stronger effects at higher emission quantiles. This indicates that the carbon burden of global production fragmentation is disproportionately concentrated among high‐emitting economies. Financial crises reduce emissions in the short run through contractionary effects. However, their long‐run impacts are heterogeneous and may ultimately increase emissions, particularly in carbon‐intensive contexts where investment in cleaner technologies is delayed. Regulatory quality mitigates these effects over time, with stronger institutions associated with lower long‐run emissions and more disciplined adjustment during periods of turbulence. The findings provide new evidence that the environmental consequences of GVC participation are not uniform but depend on crisis conditions and governance structures. For firms and supply chain managers, the results highlight that international integration can embed carbon risks unless accompanied by deliberate upgrading, cleaner sourcing, and stronger oversight across production networks. Overall, the study contributes by integrating GVC dynamics, financial instability, and distributional heterogeneity into a unified empirical framework, offering insights relevant for business strategy and environmental governance.

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