Revisiting the Income, Energy Consumption and Carbon Emissions Nexus: New Evidence from Quantile Regression for Different Country Groups
Abstract
The Environment Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis has been widely tested in the energy economics literature. However, previous studies focused only on the mean effects and have not yet examined the role of pollution levels in the income-pollution nexus. This paper uses quantile regression to reexamine the effect of economic growth and energy consumption on dioxide carbon (CO2) emissions for five panels of 59 countries. The results reveal that energy consumption increases CO2 emissions in all panels, the effect being larger in low pollution countries. They also provide evidence supporting the EKC hypothesis for Sub-Saharan, American and European countries at all quantiles, and for Asian and MENA countries at lower levels of CO2 emissions. These findings suggest that economic growth is not everywhere and always the cause and the cure of pollution. Therefore, environmental control policies should be tailored differently across low and high pollution countries.Keywords: Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, economic growth, energy consumption, quantile regressionJEL Classifications: C23, F18, O58, Q53.Downloads
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Published
2017-07-18
How to Cite
Keho, Y. (2017). Revisiting the Income, Energy Consumption and Carbon Emissions Nexus: New Evidence from Quantile Regression for Different Country Groups. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, 7(3), 356–363. Retrieved from https://econjournals.com./index.php/ijeep/article/view/4772
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