XF-KITBRHX-A Business as usual: bank climate commitments, lending, and engagement
Abstract
Parinitha (Pari) Sastry, Emil Verner, David Marques-Ibanez Working Paper Series Business as usual: bank climate commitments, lending, and engagement No 2921 Disclaimer: This paper should not be reported as representing the views of the European Central Bank (ECB). The views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the ECB. Abstract This paper studies the impact of voluntary climate commitments by banks on their lending activity. We use administrative data on the universe of bank lending from 19 European countries. There is strong selection into commitments, with increased participation by the largest banks and banks with the most pre-existing exposure to high-polluting industries. Setting a commitment leads to a boost in a lender’s ESG rating. Lenders reduce credit in sectors they have targeted as high priority for decarbonization. However, climate-aligned banks do not change their lending or loan pricing differentially compared to banks without climate commitments, suggesting they are not actively divesting. We can reject that climate-aligned lenders divest from firms in targeted sectors by more than 2.6%. Firm borrowers are no more likely to set climate targets after their lender sets a climate target, which casts doubt on active engagement by lenders. These results call into question the efficacy of voluntary commitments. Keywords: Banks, Green Lending, Voluntary targets JEL Codes: Q50, G21 ECB Working Paper Series No 29211 Non-technical …
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People Cited in This Document
- David Marques-Ibanez author European Central Bank
- Parinitha Sastry author MIT Sloan
- Emil Verner author MIT Sloan
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European Central Bank Working Paper Series (2024). Business as usual: bank climate commitments, lending, and engagement. XFID: XF-KITBRHX-A. Retrieved from https://xframework.id/XFKITBRHXA
XF-KITBRHX-A