The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Climate change is one of the existential threats of modern times, which deserves urgent attention by policymakers. The objective of this paper is to comprehend the impact of climate change on the Gambian economy both in the short and long-run. METHODS: This paper analyses...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: C. Belford, D. Huang, E. Ceesay, Y.N. Ahmed, L. Sanyang, R.H. Jonga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran Muncipality 2020-10-01
Series:International Journal of Human Capital in Urban Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijhcum.net/article_44279_d29bf3e3f42798ae2da50bbb8853d21e.pdf
id doaj-395bd1b2980a4de68a999bf470404fd0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-395bd1b2980a4de68a999bf470404fd02020-11-25T03:34:43ZengTehran MuncipalityInternational Journal of Human Capital in Urban Management2476-46982476-47012020-10-015430531810.22034/IJHCUM.2020.04.0344279The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016C. Belford0D. Huang1E. Ceesay2Y.N. Ahmed3L. Sanyang4R.H. Jonga5The Institute of Agricultural Economics and Development, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing, ChinaThe Institute of Agricultural Economics and Development, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing, ChinaSchool of Business and Public Administration, University of the Gambia, the GambiaThe Institute of Agricultural Economics and Development, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing, ChinaSchool of Business and Public Administration, University of the Gambia, the GambiaFaculty of Agriculture, Cairo University, EgyptBACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Climate change is one of the existential threats of modern times, which deserves urgent attention by policymakers. The objective of this paper is to comprehend the impact of climate change on the Gambian economy both in the short and long-run. METHODS: This paper analyses time series data from 1969 to 2016. The study incorporated rainfall and temperature as proxies of climate change into the Cobb-Douglas production function. The Augmented Dickey-Fuller and the Phillips-Perron stationarity test for unit root found that the growth rate of rainfall is not statistically significant with the Mackinnon approximate p-value for z (t) =0.2306. The first lag is significant at 5% and 10% but has a negative coefficient in the first differential up to the fourth lag. In contrast, the growth rate of temperature is statistically significant with a p-value of 0.0196. FINDING: The findings revealed that human capital growth is not significantly related to economic growth in The Gambia. In the long-run, the growth rates of climate change variables are all statistically significant and associated with a negative impact on economic growth. For the short-run, the lag difference of rainfall against its own lag is statistically significant and has a positive impact on economic growth. The lag difference in the growth rate of the Gross Domestic Product is not statistically significantly related to the growth rate of rainfall. CONCLUSION: The Gambia is vulnerable to climate change shocks, consequently climate change will negatively impact economic growth resulting in high unemployment, low productivity, and high poverty rate.http://www.ijhcum.net/article_44279_d29bf3e3f42798ae2da50bbb8853d21e.pdfthe impact of climate change on economic growth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C. Belford
D. Huang
E. Ceesay
Y.N. Ahmed
L. Sanyang
R.H. Jonga
spellingShingle C. Belford
D. Huang
E. Ceesay
Y.N. Ahmed
L. Sanyang
R.H. Jonga
The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016
International Journal of Human Capital in Urban Management
the impact of climate change on economic growth
author_facet C. Belford
D. Huang
E. Ceesay
Y.N. Ahmed
L. Sanyang
R.H. Jonga
author_sort C. Belford
title The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016
title_short The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016
title_full The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016
title_fullStr The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016
title_full_unstemmed The impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016
title_sort impact of climate change on economic growth based on time series evidence, 1969-2016
publisher Tehran Muncipality
series International Journal of Human Capital in Urban Management
issn 2476-4698
2476-4701
publishDate 2020-10-01
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Climate change is one of the existential threats of modern times, which deserves urgent attention by policymakers. The objective of this paper is to comprehend the impact of climate change on the Gambian economy both in the short and long-run. METHODS: This paper analyses time series data from 1969 to 2016. The study incorporated rainfall and temperature as proxies of climate change into the Cobb-Douglas production function. The Augmented Dickey-Fuller and the Phillips-Perron stationarity test for unit root found that the growth rate of rainfall is not statistically significant with the Mackinnon approximate p-value for z (t) =0.2306. The first lag is significant at 5% and 10% but has a negative coefficient in the first differential up to the fourth lag. In contrast, the growth rate of temperature is statistically significant with a p-value of 0.0196. FINDING: The findings revealed that human capital growth is not significantly related to economic growth in The Gambia. In the long-run, the growth rates of climate change variables are all statistically significant and associated with a negative impact on economic growth. For the short-run, the lag difference of rainfall against its own lag is statistically significant and has a positive impact on economic growth. The lag difference in the growth rate of the Gross Domestic Product is not statistically significantly related to the growth rate of rainfall. CONCLUSION: The Gambia is vulnerable to climate change shocks, consequently climate change will negatively impact economic growth resulting in high unemployment, low productivity, and high poverty rate.
topic the impact of climate change on economic growth
url http://www.ijhcum.net/article_44279_d29bf3e3f42798ae2da50bbb8853d21e.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT cbelford theimpactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT dhuang theimpactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT eceesay theimpactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT ynahmed theimpactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT lsanyang theimpactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT rhjonga theimpactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT cbelford impactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT dhuang impactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT eceesay impactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT ynahmed impactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT lsanyang impactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
AT rhjonga impactofclimatechangeoneconomicgrowthbasedontimeseriesevidence19692016
_version_ 1724557990526189568