With this paper, the authors aim to contribute to the emerging literature on how finance regime actors are situated in socio-technical systems and to further explore the role of the finance sector in sustainability transitions.
The finance sector has a long track record of engaging with sustainability issues, and policymakers and sector representatives agree that a transition to sustainability needs to be mirrored by rapidly expanding financing. Based on in-depth interviews with a broad range of actors in the Swedish finance sector, it is shown that despite a strong recognition of the challenges, the sector remains cautious towards risk.
The authors explore what motivates the sector and how to govern a faster transition and find that informants strongly believe that the sector cannot move any faster without further government intervention. The preferred policy is the use of generic tools such as CO2 taxes, or for the government to step in and mitigate the risk. They conclude that a more ambitious narrative on how the private and public sector can collaborate to share risk is needed, as it is unlikely that the finance sector will lead the way.
This study addresses three central research questions:
The main finding is that the financial regime cannot be expected to be a major driver of sustainability transitions without significant policy interventions or active governance from the public to create new partnerships and risk-sharing mechanisms that alleviate the inherently higher risk associated with more rapid deployment of sustainable finance.
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