Environmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitization

Abstract Greenwashing, as a deceptive market behavior, not only undermines market order and credibility but also damage the environment. How to curb greenwashing is a critical issue for China as it enters an economic transition period and strives for sustainable development. In 2018, China implement...

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Main Authors: Yating Ding, Xudong Wang, Lin Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2025-04-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-04831-x
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author Yating Ding
Xudong Wang
Lin Wu
author_facet Yating Ding
Xudong Wang
Lin Wu
author_sort Yating Ding
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Greenwashing, as a deceptive market behavior, not only undermines market order and credibility but also damage the environment. How to curb greenwashing is a critical issue for China as it enters an economic transition period and strives for sustainable development. In 2018, China implemented the Environmental Tax Law, imposing pollution fees on polluting enterprises for the first time in the form of mandatory taxation. Whether this measure can enhance real environmental benefits and curb greenwashing behaviors of companies is worth exploring. This paper utilizes panel data from listed companies from 2015 to 2021 and employs a Difference-in-Differences model to investigate the impact of the environmental tax law on greenwashing. Empirical results demonstrate that environmental tax law can effectively suppress greenwashing among heavily polluting enterprises. The Double Machine Learning model similarly validates this outcome. To explore the influence of mechanisms, we analyze the moderating effects of multidimensional (company, society, and government) digitization and confirm the dominant moderating role of government digitization. Furthermore, heavily polluting enterprises, particularly those in regions with higher tax rates, those required to disclose information, and high-tech firms, are more susceptible to the influence of environmental tax law in adopting real green production practices. This study confirms the positive role of environmental tax law and introduces the comprehensive digitalization moderation mechanism for the first time, providing important insights for China’s green transition and regional environmental governance.
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spelling doaj-art-70a1ea5f9a35410da8aafe559c4a3b7b2025-08-20T03:10:07ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922025-04-0112111510.1057/s41599-025-04831-xEnvironmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitizationYating Ding0Xudong Wang1Lin Wu2School of Sociology, Wuhan UniversityCollege of Management and Economics, Tianjin UniversitySchool of Sociology, Wuhan UniversityAbstract Greenwashing, as a deceptive market behavior, not only undermines market order and credibility but also damage the environment. How to curb greenwashing is a critical issue for China as it enters an economic transition period and strives for sustainable development. In 2018, China implemented the Environmental Tax Law, imposing pollution fees on polluting enterprises for the first time in the form of mandatory taxation. Whether this measure can enhance real environmental benefits and curb greenwashing behaviors of companies is worth exploring. This paper utilizes panel data from listed companies from 2015 to 2021 and employs a Difference-in-Differences model to investigate the impact of the environmental tax law on greenwashing. Empirical results demonstrate that environmental tax law can effectively suppress greenwashing among heavily polluting enterprises. The Double Machine Learning model similarly validates this outcome. To explore the influence of mechanisms, we analyze the moderating effects of multidimensional (company, society, and government) digitization and confirm the dominant moderating role of government digitization. Furthermore, heavily polluting enterprises, particularly those in regions with higher tax rates, those required to disclose information, and high-tech firms, are more susceptible to the influence of environmental tax law in adopting real green production practices. This study confirms the positive role of environmental tax law and introduces the comprehensive digitalization moderation mechanism for the first time, providing important insights for China’s green transition and regional environmental governance.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-04831-x
spellingShingle Yating Ding
Xudong Wang
Lin Wu
Environmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitization
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
title Environmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitization
title_full Environmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitization
title_fullStr Environmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitization
title_full_unstemmed Environmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitization
title_short Environmental tax law and greenwashing: the moderating role of digitization
title_sort environmental tax law and greenwashing the moderating role of digitization
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-04831-x
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