EDC Business School

Founded in 1900, Audencia is one of Europe's leading business schools.

It is EQUIS, AACSB and AMBA accredited. As the first business school in France to join the United Nations' Global Compact initiative, and a signatory to its Principles of Responsible Management Education, Audencia was committed from the outset to training and supporting innovative, responsible managers with hybrid skills who can make a positive contribution to the major challenges facing our organizations, our societies and our planet. Audencia has also created Gaïa, the very first business school dedicated to ecological and social transition.

In co-creation with its stakeholders, Audencia produces and disseminates knowledge that has an impact on scientific literature, the content of its training courses, business practices and society as a whole. It thus contributes to the following three major challenges: the creation and use of responsible technologies and information, the definition and adoption of managerial approaches favoring inclusive organizations and societies, and the design and implementation of sustainable business and development models.

Audencia offers management and communication programs from bachelor to doctorate level. It has signed agreements with 215 academic institutions abroad, and more than 180 national and international companies. It has over 7,200 students, a faculty of 152 professors and a network of over 34,000 graduates.

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The goal of this study is to examine how environmental taxes influence the comparative advantage in environmental products and carbon emissions within emerging economies. To gain a better understanding, we examine whether this impact changes depending on the level of government integrity. The results indicate that increased environmental taxes mitigate the comparative advantage in environmental goods for emerging markets. However, for countries with high levels of government integrity, higher environmental taxes enhance their competitive edge in environmental goods. Additionally, our findings show that although a rise in environmental taxes is associated with higher carbon emissions, raising such taxes results in a reduction in carbon emissions for emerging economies with solid government integrity. These findings suggest that robust political institutions are crucial in promoting the comparative advantage of emerging markets in environmental goods and mitigating climate change. In the absence of substantial confidence in political or governmental institutions, the efficient implementation of climate taxes poses considerable challenges. Furthermore, we observe that an increase in the comparative advantage of environmental goods results in a decrease in carbon emissions.
KOCAARSLAN Baris - EDC Business School |

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