Skip to main content
AkademIndex

Products

For developers

AkademBasesoonOpen API for the ecosystem
Latin
English
Article

Asymmetric Impact of International Trade on Consumption-Based Carbon Emissions in MINT Nations

Tomiwa Sunday AdebayoDepartment of Business Administration, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Science, Cyprus International University, Nicosia 99040, TurkeyAbraham Ayobamiji AwosusiDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Science, Near East University, North Cyprus, Mersin 99040, TurkeyHusam RjoubDepartment of Accounting and Finance, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Cyprus International University, Mersin 10, Haspolat 99040, TurkeyMirela PanaitDepartment of Cybernetics, Economic Informatics, Finance and Accounting, Petroleum-Gas University of Ploiesti, 100680 Ploiești, RomaniaCătălin PopescuDepartment of Business Administration, Petroleum-Gas University of Ploiesti, 100680 Ploiești, Romania
Energiesjournal2021en
ABI

Abstract

The association between carbon emissions and international trade has been examined thoroughly; however, consumption-based carbon emissions, which is adjusted for international trade, have not been studied extensively. Therefore, the present study assesses the asymmetric impact of trade (import and export) and economic growth in consumption-based carbon emissions (CCO2) using the MINT nations (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria and Turkey) as a case study. We applied the Nonlinear ARDL to assess this connection using dataset between 1990 and 2018. The outcomes from the BDS test affirmed the use of nonlinear techniques. Furthermore, the NARDL bounds test confirmed long-run association between CCO2 and exports, imports and economic growth. The outcomes from the NARDL long and short-run estimates disclosed that positive (negative) shocks in imports increase (decrease) CCO2 emissions in all the MINT nations. Moreover, positive (negative) shocks in exports decrease (increase) CCO2 emissions in all the MINT nations. As expected, a positive shock in economic growth triggers CCO2 emissions while a negative shift does not have significant impact on CCO2 emissions in the MINT nations. Furthermore, we applied the Gradual shift causality test and the outcomes disclose that imports and economic growth can predict CCO2 emissions in the MINT nations. The study outcomes have significant policy recommendations for policymakers in the MINT nations.

Topics

Identifiers

Citations and references

Metrics — AkademScholar · Coming soon