RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Environmental Regulation, Compliance Strategies, and Productivity: Evidence from China JF Land Economics JO Land Econ FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 41 OP 61 DO 10.3368/le.98.1.073020-0118R1 VO 98 IS 1 A1 Liu, Mengdi A1 Shadbegian, Ron A1 Zhang, Bing YR 2022 UL http://le.uwpress.org/content/98/1/41.abstract AB The strong version of the Porter hypothesis indicates that environmental regulations may cause firms to become more productive. However, using a difference-in-differences regression model with propensity score matching, we find that more stringent wastewater discharge requirements faced by textile, printing, and dyeing firms significantly reduced their total factor productivity (TFP) by 13%-14%. We advance the literature by providing evidence that more stringent regulation has a larger negative TFP effect on firms that rely more heavily on end-of-pipe abatement strategies rather than change-in-production-process techniques. Moreover, most of the negative TFP effects of the stricter environmental regulation occur at domestically owned private firms