Evidence can be marshalled to support either the view that pollution abatement is a cost burden on firms and is detrimental to competitiveness, or that reducing emissions increases efficiency and saves money, giving firms a cost advantage. In an effort to resolve this seeming paradox, the relationsh
β¦ LIBER β¦
Does it pay to be loyal? An empirical analysis of underwriting relationships and fees
β Scribed by Timothy R. Burch; Vikram Nanda; Vincent Warther
- Book ID
- 113710773
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 290 KB
- Volume
- 77
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0304-405X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
DOES IT PAY TO BE GREEN? AN EMPIRICAL EX
β
Stuart L. Hart; Gautam Ahuja
π
Article
π
1996
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 817 KB
Does It Really Pay to Be Green? An Empir
β
Andrew A. King; Michael J. Lenox
π
Article
π
2001
π
MIT Press
π
English
β 98 KB
Does It Really Pay to Be Green? An Empir
β
Andrew A. King; Michael J. Lenox
π
Article
π
2001
π
MIT Press
π
English
β 98 KB
## Summary Previous empirical work suggests that firms with high environmental performance tend to be profitable, but questions persist about the nature of the relationship. Does stronger environmental performance really lead to better financial performance, or is the observed relationship the outc
Beyond βDoes it Pay to be Green?β A Meta
β
Dixon-Fowler, Heather R.; Slater, Daniel J.; Johnson, Jonathan L.; Ellstrand, Al
π
Article
π
2012
π
Springer
π
English
β 255 KB
Does it pay to be really good? addressin
β
Barnett, Michael L. (author);Salomon, Robert M. (author)
π
Article
π
2012
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 324 KB
Does it pay to be really good? addressin
β
Barnett, Michael L. (author);Salomon, Robert M. (author)
π
Article
π
2012
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 324 KB