Revisiting carbon Kuznets curves with endogenous breaks modeling: evidence of decoupling and saturation (but few inverted-Us) for individual OECD countries
Autor: | George Messinis, Brantley Liddle |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Statistics and Probability
History Economics and Econometrics Polymers and Plastics CO2 emissions Environmental Kuznets curve OECD countries nonlinear flexible form multiple endogenous breaks income-emissions elasticities jel:C22 010501 environmental sciences 01 natural sciences Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Mathematics (miscellaneous) Kuznets curve jel:Q43 jel:O44 0502 economics and business Econometrics Economics Per capita Business and International Management 050205 econometrics 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Saturation (genetic) Welfare economics jel:C50 05 social sciences Linear model Oecd countries Decoupling (cosmology) Greenhouse gas Economic model jel:Q56 Income elasticity of demand Social Sciences (miscellaneous) |
Zdroj: | Empirical Economics. 54:783-798 |
ISSN: | 1435-8921 0377-7332 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00181-016-1209-y |
Popis: | This paper tests for a carbon Kuznets curve (CKC) by examining the carbon emissions per capita–GDP per capita relationship individually, for 21 OECD countries over 1870–2010 using a reduced-form, linear model that allows for multiple endogenously determined breaks. This approach addresses several important econometric and modeling issues, e.g., (1) it is highly flexible and can approximate complicated nonlinear relationships without presuming a priori any particular relationship; (2) it avoids the nonlinear transformations of potentially nonstationary income. For 10 of 14 countries that were ultimately estimated, the uncovered emission–income relationship was either (1) decoupling—where income no longer affected emissions in a statistically significant way, (2) saturation—where the emissions elasticity of income is declining, less than proportional, but still positive, or (3) no transition—where the emissions elasticity of income is (or very near) unity. For only four countries did the emissions–income relationship become negative—i.e., a CKC. In concert with previous work, we conclude that the finding of a CKC is country-specific and that the shared timing among countries is important in income-environment transitions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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