Affiliation:
1. Department of Economics University of Lagos Lagos Nigeria
2. EDC Paris Business School OCRE Research Lab Paris France
3. Riphah School of Business and Management Riphah International University Lahore Pakistan
4. Faculty of Economic Sciences University of Warsaw Warszawa Poland
5. Department of Management Sciences COMSATS University Islamabad Sahiwal Campus Sahiwal Pakistan
6. School of Accounting, Economics, and Finance, Faculty of Business and Law University of Portsmouth Portsmouth UK
Abstract
AbstractStudying environmental quality is essential for promoting sustainable development and ensuring a healthy and prosperous future for all, as it directly affects human health, well‐being, and quality of life. This paper looks at how globalisation, remittances, human capital, foreign direct investment, and financial growth affect carbon dioxide emissions in landlocked African countries from 1980 to 2018. The study looks at the elasticities between study factors by using second‐generation tests, as well as Continuously‐updated and Fully Modified (Cup‐FM) and Continuously‐updated and Bias‐Corrected (Cup‐BC) tests. The results show that remittances, human capital, natural resources, and income growth all make the environment worse by increasing CO2 emissions, whilst globalisation, foreign direct investment, and financial development all make it better by reducing emissions. The panel causality analysis shows that there are two ways in which transfers and CO2 emissions cause each other, but only one way in which CO2 emissions cause globalisation. Globalisation should be implemented sustainably to avoid irreversible long‐term environmental impacts that deprive future generations of the chance to prosper or maintain their quality of life. It should also empower people and reduce inequality in landlocked countries.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting
Cited by
1 articles.
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