Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies

This study examines the dynamic interrelationships between trade, income growth, energy consumption and CO2 emissions for G-20 economies in a framework of cointegrated vector autoregression (CVAR). Johansen's maximum likelihood procedure is used to estimate the coefficients of the cointegrated...

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Main Authors: Jungho Baek, Hyun Seok Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Institute for International Economic Policy 2011-03-01
Series:East Asian Economic Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2011.15.1.224
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spelling doaj-0d3cc7cb83fe4906a9b48f3cee226d642020-11-24T23:29:18ZengKorea Institute for International Economic PolicyEast Asian Economic Review2508-16402508-16672011-03-01151332http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2011.15.1.224Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies Jungho Baek 0Hyun Seok Kim 1University of Alaska FairbanksKorea Energy Economics InstituteThis study examines the dynamic interrelationships between trade, income growth, energy consumption and CO2 emissions for G-20 economies in a framework of cointegrated vector autoregression (CVAR). Johansen's maximum likelihood procedure is used to estimate the coefficients of the cointegrated VAR. The results show that trade and income growth have a favorable effect on environmental quality for the developed G-20 member countries, while they have an adverse effect on the environment for the developing member countries. We also find that energy con- sumption tends to worsen environmental quality for both the developed and developing countries. Finally, it is found that trade and income to emission and energy causality holds for the developed countries; changes in degree of trade openness and income growth lead to corresponding changes in the rates of growth in emission and energy consumption. Emission and energy to trade and income causality, on the other hand, is found to hold for the developing countries; any shocks in emission and energy consumption cause corresponding fluctuations in income growth and trade openness.http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2011.15.1.224CointegrationEnergyEnvironmentGrowthIncomeTradeTime-series analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jungho Baek
Hyun Seok Kim
spellingShingle Jungho Baek
Hyun Seok Kim
Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies
East Asian Economic Review
Cointegration
Energy
Environment
Growth
Income
Trade
Time-series analysis
author_facet Jungho Baek
Hyun Seok Kim
author_sort Jungho Baek
title Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies
title_short Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies
title_full Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies
title_fullStr Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies
title_full_unstemmed Trade Liberalization, Economic Growth, Energy Consumption and the Environment: Time Series Evidence from G-20 Economies
title_sort trade liberalization, economic growth, energy consumption and the environment: time series evidence from g-20 economies
publisher Korea Institute for International Economic Policy
series East Asian Economic Review
issn 2508-1640
2508-1667
publishDate 2011-03-01
description This study examines the dynamic interrelationships between trade, income growth, energy consumption and CO2 emissions for G-20 economies in a framework of cointegrated vector autoregression (CVAR). Johansen's maximum likelihood procedure is used to estimate the coefficients of the cointegrated VAR. The results show that trade and income growth have a favorable effect on environmental quality for the developed G-20 member countries, while they have an adverse effect on the environment for the developing member countries. We also find that energy con- sumption tends to worsen environmental quality for both the developed and developing countries. Finally, it is found that trade and income to emission and energy causality holds for the developed countries; changes in degree of trade openness and income growth lead to corresponding changes in the rates of growth in emission and energy consumption. Emission and energy to trade and income causality, on the other hand, is found to hold for the developing countries; any shocks in emission and energy consumption cause corresponding fluctuations in income growth and trade openness.
topic Cointegration
Energy
Environment
Growth
Income
Trade
Time-series analysis
url http://dx.doi.org/10.11644/KIEP.JEAI.2011.15.1.224
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AT hyunseokkim tradeliberalizationeconomicgrowthenergyconsumptionandtheenvironmenttimeseriesevidencefromg20economies
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