The transition to a green economy is arguably the most important economic transformation of the next decades. To be completed it requires the mobilization of astounding resources, a flow of technological innovation and a whole series of new rules going from technical standards to financial regulation. Given the resources it needs, the transition, to be credible, requires a full engagement of the financial system. On this regard we analyze the policy set-up of Europe, the most advanced area on the issue. We identify a three-layer functioning of the EU project for transition. The first one (“green products”) is fully compatible with the present financial system. A second layer entails changes in the business model and organization of financial operators but it can be phased in with minor overhauls. Finally, there is a third layer, largely incompatible with the present financial system, yet crucial to achieve transition. We show that, according to the same EU analysis, the transition needs a total change in the financial landscape and therefore it is, rebus sic stantibus, intrinsically unfeasible. We suggest ways to escape the dilemma that connects financial stability and green economy.

Esposito, L., Mastromatteo, G., Giuseppe Gatti, E., Sustainable finance, the good, the bad and the ugly: a critical assessment of the EU institutional framework for the green transition, <<Sustainable finance, the good, the bad and the ugly: a critical assessment of the EU institutional framework for the green transition>>, 2019; 2019 (4): 1-42 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/135533]

Sustainable finance, the good, the bad and the ugly: a critical assessment of the EU institutional framework for the green transition

Esposito, Lorenzo
Primo
;
Mastromatteo, Giuseppe
Ultimo
;
2019

Abstract

The transition to a green economy is arguably the most important economic transformation of the next decades. To be completed it requires the mobilization of astounding resources, a flow of technological innovation and a whole series of new rules going from technical standards to financial regulation. Given the resources it needs, the transition, to be credible, requires a full engagement of the financial system. On this regard we analyze the policy set-up of Europe, the most advanced area on the issue. We identify a three-layer functioning of the EU project for transition. The first one (“green products”) is fully compatible with the present financial system. A second layer entails changes in the business model and organization of financial operators but it can be phased in with minor overhauls. Finally, there is a third layer, largely incompatible with the present financial system, yet crucial to achieve transition. We show that, according to the same EU analysis, the transition needs a total change in the financial landscape and therefore it is, rebus sic stantibus, intrinsically unfeasible. We suggest ways to escape the dilemma that connects financial stability and green economy.
2019
Inglese
Sustainable finance, the good, the bad and the ugly: a critical assessment of the EU institutional framework for the green transition
978-88-343-3892-6
Vita e Pensiero
Esposito, L., Mastromatteo, G., Giuseppe Gatti, E., Sustainable finance, the good, the bad and the ugly: a critical assessment of the EU institutional framework for the green transition, <<Sustainable finance, the good, the bad and the ugly: a critical assessment of the EU institutional framework for the green transition>>, 2019; 2019 (4): 1-42 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/135533]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/135533
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