Mariangela Zoli
University of Rome Tor Vergata
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mariangela Zoli.
Climate Policy | 2017
Claudia Ghisetti; Susanna Mancinelli; Massimiliano Mazzanti; Mariangela Zoli
We analyse the role of financial barriers in affecting the adoption of environmental innovations (EI) with a focus on manufacturing small and medium-sized enterprises in Europe. In taking stock of the consolidated literature on EI, we find that the role of financial barriers is substantially neglected, although crucial, even more relevant in the current phase of the economic cycle. Our empirical analysis confirms the existence of direct negative effects of financial barriers on environmental innovation investment decisions. It furthermore sheds more light on the determinants of financial barriers that shape firms’ cleaner production choices. Our findings have the following policy implications: properly designed policies can play a critical role, not only by stimulating EI through their determinants, but also by acting on the financial obstacles to eco-innovation. Policy relevance Environmental innovations (EI) are essential to achieve economic growth and environmental protection goals. Technological development is one of the key factors that can counterbalance the growth and population emission-augmenting effects. EI are a priority in major EU policy strategies and a prerequisite for the development of a ‘Resource efficient Europe’, one of the flagship initiatives of Europe 2020. The existence of financial barriers can constitute a serious deterrent for the eco-innovative capacity of firms, even more than for ‘traditional’ innovations, as EI are characterized by high technical risk, long payback period and uncertainty on the appropriability of private rents. This article analyses in depth whether barriers related to external financing affect EI investments and whether the stringency of financial constraints to investments in EI is affected by factors related to EI specificities. We show that when both direct and indirect effects on EI investments are considered, the role of the policy framework appears to be as particularly crucial in order to reverse the risk/return trade-off of eco-innovative investments. Targeting policy interventions to facilitate access to credit and to mitigate capital markets’ imperfections is essential to mitigate the apparent contradiction between EU industrial policies and climate abatement scenarios.
Rivista di Politica Economica | 2009
Laura Castellucci; Alessio D’Amato; Mariangela Zoli
This paper investigates the relation between income distribution and direct households’ emissions in Italy. Our results seem to confirm some recent articles concerned with income-pollution relationship in other countries. Indeed, our empirical analysis shows that decreasing inequality would lead to higher aggregate emissions, whereas increasing inequality would reduce environmental problems. By going into a deeper inquiry of such results, we identify some weaknesses in the framework proposed by the literature, namely the shape of emission intensities distribution. We show that changes in such distribution might lead to opposite conclusions. [JEL numbers: Q01; Q56; D12]
Social Indicators Research | 2012
Manuela Coromaldi; Mariangela Zoli
Energy Economics | 2013
Valeria Costantini; Alessio D'Amato; Chiara Martini; Maria Cristina Tommasino; Edilio Valentini; Mariangela Zoli
Journal of Environmental Planning and Management | 2012
Alessio D'Amato; Mariangela Zoli
Ecological Economics | 2016
Alessio D'Amato; Susanna Mancinelli; Mariangela Zoli
Ecological Economics | 2016
Valeria Costantini; Giorgia Sforna; Mariangela Zoli
Archive | 2007
Manuela Coromaldi; Mariangela Zoli
Archive | 2014
Alessio D'Amato; Massimiliano Mazzanti; Francesco Nicolli; Mariangela Zoli
Archive | 2014
Alessio D'Amato; Susanna Mancinelli; Mariangela Zoli