1. Introduction
It is generally believed that technological innovation is an important approach for an enterprise for building its core competitive advantage. A number of existing studies explore important factors affecting technological innovation, such as ownership structure [
1], stock liquidity [
2], the number of analysts [
3], CEO tenure [
4,
5], and CEO incentive mechanism [
6,
7]. These studies provide a range of managerial insights for businesses to enhance their innovative capability. This paper aims to further enrich this literature by focusing on CEO’s awareness of environmental protection.
In a typical enterprise’s management structure, CEOs tend to be at the very top, and their decisions are closely related to the company’s strengths, weaknesses and needs [
8]. For example, if an enterprise is led by a CEO with longer tenure, it has more time to conduct extensive technology search, acquire preferred R&D skills, and hire more R&D personnel to implement exploratory innovation strategies [
4,
5,
9]. CEO’s leadership style is also an important factor affecting the company’s technological innovation. For example, a transformational CEO can have a significant lifting effect on promoting product innovation [
10]. There is also research on how a CEO’s focus on the past, present and future will affect the development speed of new products. For example, in a stable environment, if a company’s CEO pays more attention to the past and the present, but less attention to the future, the company’s new product development speed will be higher. On the other hand, in a dynamic environment, a company’s CEO needs to pay less attention to the past, but more attention to the present and the future, in order to achieve faster new product development [
11].
Therefore, it can be concluded that the influence of CEO on corporate innovation is indeed significant, and this effect is manifested through the multi-faceted qualities of the CEO. One of the most important qualities is CEO’s environmental awareness, which reflects people’s views about the human–nature relationship, develops within the context of human societies and affect human experience and behavior [
12]. However, there is little research on the role of CEO’s environmental awareness in enterprise technology innovation. In this paper, we make a major research contribution by filling this research gap.
According to Upper Echelon Theory [
13], the strategic choice of a company is, to a large extent, influenced by personal cognition of its CEO. As a concrete manifestation of CEO’s cognition, can CEO’s environmental awareness impact the strategic decisions of their enterprises, including technological innovation? what will happen to the relationship between the CEO’s environment awareness and technological innovation at different levels of monitoring? There has been much literature on the significance of CEO’s environmental awareness in enterprise management. Some scholars propose that managers’ environmental awareness is an important factor affecting the implementation of enterprise environmental strategy. Sharma [
14] finds that managers’ interpretation of environmental issues significantly affects enterprises’ environmental strategies. The results show that managers are more likely to adopt forward-looking environmental strategies when they regard environmental problems as opportunities for enterprises’ development. Aragón-Correa et al. [
15] argue that if more managers in an organization think that enterprises should take on environmental responsibility, a high level of executive environmental commitment will appear to promote the development of environmental protection and the implementation of forward-looking environmental strategies. Roxas and Coetzer [
16] find that if managers believe that the institutional environment can support the implementation of environmental policies, they are more likely to have a positive attitude toward environmental issues. Zhang et al. [
17] support the view that environmental awareness of senior executives plays a crucial role in external normative pressures and in the practice of energy conservation policies. At the same time, several studies explore the impact of managers’ environmental awareness on corporate green innovation. Egri and Herman [
18] consider that environmentally conscious executives are good at capitalizing on the importance consumers, suppliers and competitors attach to green innovation. They actively develop new products to meet consumer requirements and to gain competitive advantages. Burki and Dahstrom [
19] confirm that top management commitment to sustainability yields higher levels of green process innovation, green managerial innovation, and customer cooperation. Gadenne et al. [
20] argue that executives will adopt green innovations to upgrade their environmental outputs if they realize that environmentally friendly business policies will bring beefier profits.
Although the existing research helps us understand how the environmental awareness of managers triggers green innovation, there are still several limitations. First, there is very little research on the environmental awareness of CEOs and how it relates to technological innovation in their enterprises. Second, enterprise technology innovation is a long-return and high-risk endeavor. The premise that CEO environmental awareness affects technology innovation is that enterprises can effectively reduce the moral hazard in the principal-agent relationship so that CEOs commit to the long-term development of their enterprises. However, a CEO may take advantage of information asymmetry and pursue his/her own self-interest. Hence, monitoring may play an important role between a CEO’s environmental awareness and the technological innovation of his/her enterprise.
In view of the above discussion, in this paper, we study the two key factors of CEO’s environmental awareness and the level of monitoring. We collect sample data from Chinese A-share listed firms during the years of 2003–2014, integrate Upper Echelon Theory and Principal-Agent Theory, and investigate the relationship between CEO’s environmental awareness and enterprise technology innovation and the moderating role of monitoring level.
4. Conclusions
4.1. Key Findings
This paper studies the impact of CEO’s environmental awareness on technological innovation. Based on a large sample of the Chinese A-share listed firms during the years between 2003 and 2014, our empirical studies and results reach the following conclusions. Firstly, a CEO’s environmental awareness can significantly promote the technological innovation of his/her enterprise. CEO who are more environmentally conscious invest more in R&D activities, obtain more patents and achieve greater innovative success. The reasons are the following. CEOs with strong environmental awareness can clearly understand the benefits and risks associated with implementing green innovation, hence their subjective innovation will be stronger. At the same time, CEOs with high environmental awareness can focus on the attention from stakeholders on green innovation, actively develop new products to meet the needs of stakeholders, and thus improve the efficiency of enterprise technological innovation. Secondly, the positive effect of CEO’s environmental awareness on technological innovation is more evident in an environment with strong monitoring. Specifically, the promotional effect of CEO’s environmental awareness on technological innovation is more pronounced in private enterprises, enterprises with a large proportion of institutional investors, and enterprises with large analyst coverage. Thirdly, we confirm the robustness of our main model and results after excluding the samples with no information on R&D input and after employing other possible patent indicators.
4.2. Theoretical Implications
This article enriches the existing literature in the following two aspects. Firstly, we find that CEO’s environmental awareness can significantly promote the technological innovation of his/her enterprise. This is consistent with the results of Egri and Herman [
18] and Burki and Dahlstorm [
19]. However, at the same time, it supplements the relationship between CEO environmental awareness and non-environmental technology innovation, enriching the content of Upper Echelon Theory and Technological Innovation Theory. Secondly, we also find that the positive effect of CEO’s environmental awareness on technological innovation is more evident in an environment with strong monitoring. This is consistent with several existing studies such as Jensen and Meckling [
24], Knyazeva [
25], Frank and li [
26], Kochhar and David [
27], and Jensen [
28]. As Kim [
29] emphasizes, external regulators such as institutional investors or analysts can participate in corporate governance through their own expertise and information resources. They can also motivate CEOs to carry out technological innovation and focus on long-term research and development results. From this perspective, this paper identifies a mechanism of monitoring exerting on technological innovation, which is to stimulate the internal innovation potential of CEOs with high level of environmental awareness to promote the growth of enterprise technology innovation.
4.3. Managerial and Policy Implications
Technological innovation can enhance the core competitive edge of enterprises. Based on our empirical analysis and results, we put forward the following policy recommendations with the goal of improving the level of technological innovation and providing managerial insights for developing country enterprises to implement green innovation strategy. Firstly, the government should help cultivate CEOs’ awareness of environmental protection, initiate training courses to enhance CEO’s understanding of the benefits and risks of green innovation, and introduce relevant policies such as tax incentives and subsidies to encourage CEO to implement environmental protection innovation. Secondly, the government should strengthen the monitoring of state-owned enterprises and deal with the principal-agent problem. This can encourage CEOs with higher environmental awareness to engage in environmental protection innovation activities, and actively promote technological innovation of their enterprises. Thirdly, the government should actively promote the development of institutional investors and analysts, improve the structure of institutional investors and encourage institutional investors and analysts to participate in corporate governance. This can allow for them to play better monitoring roles which can help CEOs achieve effective R&D innovation.
4.4. Limitations and Future Research Directions
This research empirically examines the influence of CEO’s environmental awareness on enterprise technological innovation and the regulatory effect of monitoring on the relationship between them. However, the relationship between CEO’s environmental awareness and green technological innovation needs further study. Furthermore, case studies should be conducted to test the possible causal relationship because it is difficult to clearly define and observe the input and output of an enterprise’s green R&D. Moreover, due to the data availability limitation, in this research, we collect and analyze sample data from Chinese listed companies during the years between 2003 and 2014 only. In future research, more sample data from other years and/or other countries can be collected and analyzed to further check the robustness of our results. In addition, the relationship between environmental awareness of other executives or employees and technological innovation is also worth exploring in the future.