Asymmetric effect of environmental tax on CO2 emissions embodied in domestic final demand in South Africa: A NARDL approach

Author:

Ibe Godwin Imo1,Ezeaku Hillary Chijindu2ORCID,Okpara Itiri Idam3,Eze Eze Festus4ORCID,Igwemeka Ebele1,Ubani Obinna5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Banking and Finance University of Nigeria – Enugu Campus Enugu Nigeria

2. Department of Banking and Finance Caritas University Enugu Nigeria

3. Department of Business Education Federal College of Education – Technical Isu Nigeria

4. Department of Economics University of Nigeria Nsukka Nigeria

5. Department of Urban and Regional Planning University of Nigeria – Enugu Campus Enugu Nigeria

Abstract

AbstractMotivated by the pressing need to address environmental concerns, this study explores the relationship between environmental taxes and CO2 emissions embodied in domestic final demand in South Africa. The study uses a non‐linear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) model to analyse the asymmetric impact of environmental taxes. Results indicate that environmental taxes have an asymmetric impact on CO2 emissions embodied in domestic final demand in both the short and long runs. Specifically, both positive and negative shifts in environmental taxes are linked with a respective 0.06% decrease and a more pronounced 0.22% decrease in CO2 emissions embodied in domestic final demand. Moreover, positive shocks in the GDP growth rate are associated with an approximately 0.002% uptick in CO2 emissions, while negative shocks lead to a 0.012% decrease. Additionally, both positive and negative shocks in population growth exhibit a significant positive correlation with the response variable. The baseline estimates demonstrate that the joint effect of environmental taxes and the GDP growth rate is correlated with reductions in CO2 emissions embodied in domestic final demand. Similarly, the joint influence of environmental taxes and population growth rate is linked to declines in CO2 emissions. The study highlights the practical policy implications of these findings.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Development

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