Does gender diversity in the workplace mitigate climate change?
Research output: Working paper
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978-92-899-4983-5: European Central Bank, 2022. (Working Paper Series; No. 2650).
Research output: Working paper
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TY - UNPB
T1 - Does gender diversity in the workplace mitigate climate change?
AU - Altunbas, Yener
AU - Gambacorta, Leonardo
AU - Reghezza, Alessio
AU - Velliscig, Giulio
PY - 2022/2/28
Y1 - 2022/2/28
N2 - We match firm-corporate governance characteristics with firm-level carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions over the period 2009-2019 to study the relationship between gender diversity in the workplace and firm carbon emissions. We find that a 1 percentage point increase in the percentage of female managers within the firm leads to a 0.5% decrease in CO2 emissions. We document that this effect is statically significant, also when controlling for institutional differences caused by more patriarchal and hierarchical cultures and religions. At the same time, we show that gender diversity at the managerial level has stronger mitigating effects on climate change if females are also well-represented outside the organization, e.g. in political institutions and civil society organizations. Finally, we find that, after the Paris Agreement, firms with greater gender diversity reduced their CO2 emissions by about 5% more than firms with more male managers.
AB - We match firm-corporate governance characteristics with firm-level carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions over the period 2009-2019 to study the relationship between gender diversity in the workplace and firm carbon emissions. We find that a 1 percentage point increase in the percentage of female managers within the firm leads to a 0.5% decrease in CO2 emissions. We document that this effect is statically significant, also when controlling for institutional differences caused by more patriarchal and hierarchical cultures and religions. At the same time, we show that gender diversity at the managerial level has stronger mitigating effects on climate change if females are also well-represented outside the organization, e.g. in political institutions and civil society organizations. Finally, we find that, after the Paris Agreement, firms with greater gender diversity reduced their CO2 emissions by about 5% more than firms with more male managers.
KW - carbon emissions
KW - female managers
KW - global warming
KW - Paris Agreement
KW - green economics
U2 - 10.2866/58134
DO - 10.2866/58134
M3 - Working paper
T3 - Working Paper Series
BT - Does gender diversity in the workplace mitigate climate change?
PB - European Central Bank
CY - 978-92-899-4983-5
ER -