The impact of trade openness on global carbon dioxide emissions: Evidence from the top ten emitters among developing countries

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Date

2016

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier Science Bv

Access Rights

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Abstract

This study aims to analyze the relationship between carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, trade openness, real income and energy consumption in the top ten CO2 emitters among the developing countries; namely China, India, South Korea, Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, South Africa, Turkey, Thailand and Malaysia over the period of 1971-2011. In addition, the possible presence of the EKC hypothesis is investigated for the analyzed countries. The Zivot-Andrews unit root test with structural break, the bounds testing for cointegration in the presence of structural break and the VECM Granger causality method are employed. The empirical results indicate that (i) the analyzed variables are co-integrated for Thailand, Turkey, India, Brazil, China, Indonesia and Korea, (ii) real income, energy consumption and trade openness are the main determinants of carbon emissions in the long run, (iii) there exists a number of causal relations between the analyzed variables, (iv) the EKC hypothesis is validated for Turkey, India, China and Korea. Robust policy implications can be derived from this study since the estimated models pass several diagnostic and stability tests. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Trade openness, Energy consumption, Carbon dioxide emissions, Climate change, Environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis, Bounds test for cointegration, Environmental Kuznets Curve, Foreign Direct-Investment, Renewable Energy-Consumption, Co2 Emissions, Economic-Growth, Financial Development, Electricity Consumption, Coal Consumption, International-Trade, Causality Analysis

Journal or Series

Ecological Indicators

WoS Q Value

Q1

Scopus Q Value

Q1

Volume

67

Issue

Citation