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The Sustainable Environment in Uruguay: The Roles of Financial Development, Natural Resources, and Trade Globalization

Abraham Ayobamiji AwosusiDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Science, Near East University, Nicosia, TurkeyNkosinathi G. XuluDepartment of Geography and Environmental Studies, University of Zululand, KwaDlangezwa, South AfricaMohsen AhmadiDepartment of Industrial Engineering, Urmia University of Technology (UUT), Urmia, IranHusam RjoubDepartment of Accounting and Finance, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Cyprus International University, Mersin, TurkeyMehmet AltuntaşDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Economics, Administrative and Social Sciences, Nisantasi University, Istanbul, TurkeySolomon Eghosa UhunamureFaculty of Applied Sciences, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South AfricaSeyi Saint AkadırıDerviş KırıkkaleliDepartment of Banking and Finance, Faculty of Economic and Administrative Sciences, European University of Lefke, Lefke, Turkey
2022en
ABI

Annotatsiya

As the world continues to be a globalized society, there have been variations in environmental quality, but studies including trade globalization into the environmental policy framework remain inconclusive. Therefore, employing the time series dataset of Uruguay over the period between 1980 and 2018, the main objective of this current study is to investigate the effect of trade globalization, natural resources rents, economic growth, and financial development on carbon emissions. By employing the bounds testing procedures in combination with the critical approximation p -values of Kripfganz and Schneider (2018), the Autoregressive Distributed Lag estimator, and spectral causality test to achieve the goal of this research. The outcomes of the bounds test confirm a long-run connection between carbon emissions and these determinants. Moreover, from the outcome of the Autoregressive Distributed Lag estimator, we observed that trade liberalization is found to exert CO 2 emissions in the long and short run. The economic expansion in Uruguay imposes significant pressure on the quality of the environment in the long and short run. The abundance of natural resources significantly increases environmental deterioration in the long and short run. Furthermore, we uncover that financial development does not impact environmental deterioration in Uruguay. Finally, the outcome of the spectral causality test detected that trade globalization, economic growth, and natural resources forecast carbon emissions with the exclusion of financial development. Based on the outcome, this study suggests that policies should be tailored towards international trade must be reassessed, and the restrictions placed on the exportation of polluting-intensive commodities must be reinforced.

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