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Divergent Paths, Shared Goals: Green Finance Development in the V4 Countries

分岐する道、共有する目標:V4諸国におけるグリーンファイナンスの発展 (AI 翻訳)

Dorottya Edina Kozma, Tímea Veres, Laszlo Torok

The Eurasia Proceedings of Educational and Social Sciencesプレプリント2025-09-29#気候金融Origin: EU
DOI: 10.55549/epess.939
原典: https://doi.org/10.55549/epess.939

🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本論文は、V4諸国(チェコ、ハンガリー、ポーランド、スロバキア)におけるグリーンファイナンスの進展を比較分析する。各国の進捗状況や課題、EUの持続可能性目標との整合性を検討し、ポーランドの先駆的なグリーンボンド発行、ハンガリー中央銀行の取り組み、チェコの規制整備の遅れ、スロバキアのEU資金依存などを明らかにする。地域協力の強化や共同グリーンボンド基金の提案がなされている。

English

This paper compares green finance development in the V4 countries (Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia), analyzing progress, challenges, and alignment with EU sustainability goals. It highlights Poland's pioneering sovereign green bond, Hungary's central bank initiatives, Czech Republic's slow implementation, and Slovakia's reliance on EU funds. Proposals include a joint V4 Green Bond Fund and ESG education initiatives.

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

日本では、グリーンボンドやトランジションファイナンスの市場拡大が進む中、EUの枠組みや各国の多様なアプローチを比較する本論文は、日本の政策立案や市場設計の参考となる。特に、中央銀行の役割や規制インセンティブの事例は、日本銀行や金融庁の取り組みに示唆を与える。

In the global GX context

This paper offers a comparative perspective on green finance in Central Europe, relevant for global discussions on transition finance and policy convergence. The V4 countries' diverse paths under a common EU framework provide lessons for other regions, including Asia, on how national contexts shape green finance adoption. The proposed joint fund and ESG education initiatives could inform cross-border cooperation models.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides a comparative analysis of green finance development in V4 countries, useful for studying policy diffusion and market heterogeneity.

🏢実務担当者:Offers insights into green bond markets and regulatory incentives in Central Europe, relevant for cross-border investment strategies.

🏛政策担当者:Highlights the role of central banks and EU frameworks in driving green finance, with implications for regional cooperation and policy design.

📄 Abstract(原文)

Green finance has long been the cornerstone of sustainable development, with mechanisms and financial instruments serving to support low-carbon growth and climate resilience. This article considers the evolution of green finance in the Visegrad Four nations (the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia) and how they compare regarding progress, challenges, and alignment with European Union sustainability objectives.Though they have a shared past and dependence on fossil fuels, the V4 countries are all growing at different rates. Poland pioneered the issuance of the world's first sovereign green bond in 2016 and remains at the forefront with new-bank innovative products and high levels of government participation. Hungarian growth is spearheaded by the Hungarian Central Bank, which has launched green mortgage bonds and regulatory incentives to introduce environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations into financial markets. The Czech Republic has focused on establishing regulatory pillars, but implementation is slow and fragmented. Slovakia, on the other hand, relies on EU funding and national government schemes as well, with minimal domestic green financial tools. The analysis highlights both opportunities and barriers. While EU frameworks such as the Green Deal and Taxonomy Regulation provide strong incentives, national disparities in regulatory capacity, private sector engagement, and market maturity hinder convergence. Key challenges include reliance on fossil fuels, information asymmetries, and limited awareness among businesses and households. The study concludes that greater regional cooperation, increased transparency, and the development of cross-border financing mechanisms could strengthen the V4’s green transition. A joint V4 Green Bond Fund and ESG-focused education initiatives are proposed as pathways to accelerate sustainable finance in the region. Ultimately, effective green finance can deliver long-term environmental, economic, and social benefits, positioning the V4 countries as competitive actors in Europe’s shift toward climate neutrality.

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