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Is corporate governance important for green bond performance in emerging capital markets?
This paper examines the relationship between corporate governance mechanisms and their impact on green bond yield spreads for companies operating in emerging capital markets. The role of boards in mitigating ESG risks is well studied for developed countries, but there is no evidence of the impact of corporate governance on green fnance for emerging capital markets. To fll in the gap, we use a unique dataset constructed with data from Thomson Reuters Refnitiv Eikon, World Bank, and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). We study 283 green bond issues by 125 companies from 16 emerging markets with assigned ESG scores for the period between 2017 and 2022. Our fndings contribute to the literature in several ways. First, we provide new evidence for the signifcant impact of corporate governance on green bond yield spreads in emerging capital markets. Second, we demonstrate that issuers with higher CEO power will enjoy higher green bond yields. Third, board size matters for investors in corporate green bonds from emerging capital markets and has a negative impact on the yield spread. Moreover, in the research model we account for the specifc features of the country’s institutional environment, such as the quality of the country’s regulatory system, the capacity of the central authority and the nature of its legal system. Our fndings provide evidence that only government efectiveness and rule of law indexes are signifcant drivers of green bond spreads, while the regulatory quality index is not.