Affiliation:
1. School of Commerce Presidency University Bangalore Karnataka India
2. Symbiosis Centre for Management Studies Noida Uttar Pradesh India
3. Department of Economics Banasthali Vidyapith Aliyabad Rajasthan India
4. Institute of Business Management GLA University Mathura Uttar Pradesh India
Abstract
AbstractIndia is the second most populous country in the world and stood at seventh rank in a major climate risk index in 2019, which is a grave concern for the Indian government, policymakers and environmentalists. Therefore, the present study examines the role of fiscal policy and monetary policy instruments along with select macroeconomic variables on carbon emission in India over the period 1971–2019 in the non‐linear framework. The outcome of the study reveals that the impact of fiscal and monetary policy instruments on carbon emission is asymmetric in nature. In addition, the positive and negative shocks in fiscal and monetary policy instruments have a positive and negative impact on carbon emissions, respectively. Based on the coefficients’ magnitude, the role of fiscal policy instruments has a more prominent effect on carbon emissions than monetary policy instruments. The findings of the study imply that the Indian government is required to implement green fiscal and monetary policies. Use fiscal policy to implement a ‘green tax ratio’ and a ‘green subsidy programme’ for manufacturers and investors to reduce CO2 emissions. A ‘green lending programme’ should be introduced for commercial banks by implementing monetary policy via the central bank.
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4 articles.
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