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Stefan Ambec

Researcher at University of Toulouse

Publications -  87
Citations -  4247

Stefan Ambec is an academic researcher from University of Toulouse. The author has contributed to research in topics: Porter hypothesis & Externality. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 87 publications receiving 3379 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefan Ambec include University of Grenoble & École Normale Supérieure.

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The Porter Hypothesis at 20: Can Environmental Regulation Enhance Innovation and Competitiveness?

TL;DR: The authors provides an overview of the key theoretical and empirical insights into the Porter Hypothesis, draws policy implications from these insights, and sketches out major research themes going forward, as well as highlights the major research topics going forward.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Porter Hypothesis at 20: Can Environmental Regulation Enhance Innovation and Competitiveness?

TL;DR: The authors provides an overview of the key theoretical and empirical insights into the Porter Hypothesis, draws policy implications from these insights, and sketches out major research themes going forward, as well as highlights the major research topics going forward.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental Policy, Innovation and Performance: New Insights on the Porter Hypothesis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present three variants of the so-called Porter Hypothesis: the weak, narrow and strong versions of the hypothesis are tested using data on the four main elements of the hypothesized causality chain (environmental policy, research and development, environmental performance and commercial performance).
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The Porter Hypothesis at 20: Can Environmental Regulation Enhance Innovation and Competitiveness?

TL;DR: The Porter Hypothesis (PH) as mentioned in this paper is a well-known economic theory that states that if there are profitable opportunities to reduce pollution, profit-maximizing firms would already be taking advantage of those opportunities.
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A theoretical foundation of the Porter hypothesis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that, by reducing agency costs, an environmental regulation may enhance pollution-reducing innovation while at the same time increasing firms' private benefit, and they show that environmental regulation can enhance pollution reduction while increasing private benefit.