The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim

The impact of corruption on carbon emissions is one of the main objectives of empirical studies on environmental economics. Recently, a theoretical discussion was conducted on the significant impact of reducing the level of corruption on environmental quality in developing rather than in developed c...

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Main Authors: Reza Akhbari, Mehdi Nejati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-09-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
PHH
EKC
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019361766
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spelling doaj-a0c03aede56d4863ac0cbd1f2a35b7fe2020-11-25T02:07:06ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402019-09-0159e02516The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claimReza Akhbari0Mehdi Nejati1Faculty of Management and Economics, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, IranCorresponding author.; Faculty of Management and Economics, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, IranThe impact of corruption on carbon emissions is one of the main objectives of empirical studies on environmental economics. Recently, a theoretical discussion was conducted on the significant impact of reducing the level of corruption on environmental quality in developing rather than in developed countries. In this study, an empirical investigation of this claim was conducted using panel data which included 61 countries, between 2003 and 2016. The effects of corruption on carbon emission were considered using a panel threshold model. The threshold variable included human development index (HDI) which divided countries into developing and developed ones endogenously. According to the results, the value of threshold (γ = 0.753) was consistent with the categorization of UNDP countries by HDI. In developing countries, for each unit of increase in the corruption index –which means a decrease in corruption levels– we observe a 0.08 unit decrease in carbon emission while carbon emission is no longer affected by the corruption levels in developed countries and decrease in corruption does not have a significant effect on carbon emission levels.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019361766Environmental scienceEconomicsEnvironmental economicsCorruptionPHHEKC
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Reza Akhbari
Mehdi Nejati
spellingShingle Reza Akhbari
Mehdi Nejati
The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim
Heliyon
Environmental science
Economics
Environmental economics
Corruption
PHH
EKC
author_facet Reza Akhbari
Mehdi Nejati
author_sort Reza Akhbari
title The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim
title_short The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim
title_full The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim
title_fullStr The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim
title_full_unstemmed The effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim
title_sort effect of corruption on carbon emissions in developed and developing countries: empirical investigation of a claim
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2019-09-01
description The impact of corruption on carbon emissions is one of the main objectives of empirical studies on environmental economics. Recently, a theoretical discussion was conducted on the significant impact of reducing the level of corruption on environmental quality in developing rather than in developed countries. In this study, an empirical investigation of this claim was conducted using panel data which included 61 countries, between 2003 and 2016. The effects of corruption on carbon emission were considered using a panel threshold model. The threshold variable included human development index (HDI) which divided countries into developing and developed ones endogenously. According to the results, the value of threshold (γ = 0.753) was consistent with the categorization of UNDP countries by HDI. In developing countries, for each unit of increase in the corruption index –which means a decrease in corruption levels– we observe a 0.08 unit decrease in carbon emission while carbon emission is no longer affected by the corruption levels in developed countries and decrease in corruption does not have a significant effect on carbon emission levels.
topic Environmental science
Economics
Environmental economics
Corruption
PHH
EKC
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844019361766
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