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    ASIA unversity > 管理學院 > 財務金融學系 > 期刊論文 >  Item 310904400/112780


    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://asiair.asia.edu.tw/ir/handle/310904400/112780


    Title: Modelling economic growth, carbon emissions, and fossil fuel consumption in China: Cointegration and multivariate causality
    Authors: Lv, Zhihui;Lv, Zhihui;Amanda, M. Y.;Chu, Amanda M. Y.;馬可立;McAleer, Michael;黃永強;KEUNG, WONG WING
    Contributors: 財務金融學系
    Keywords: energy consumption, economic growth, gross domestic product, CO2 emissions, granger causality, China
    Date: 2019-10
    Issue Date: 2020-08-27 09:05:15 (UTC+0)
    Publisher: 亞洲大學
    Abstract: Most authors apply the Granger causality-VECM (vector error correction model), and Toda–Yamamoto procedures to investigate the relationships among fossil fuel consumption, emissions, and economic growth, though they ignore the group joint effects and nonlinear behaviour among the variables. In order to circumvent the limitations and bridge the gap in the literature, this paper combines cointegration and linear and nonlinear Granger causality in multivariate settings to investigate the long-run equilibrium, short-run impact, and dynamic causality relationships among economic growth, emissions, and fossil fuel consumption in China from 1965–2016. Using the combination of the newly developed econometric techniques, we obtain many novel empirical findings that are useful for policy makers. For example, cointegration and causality analysis imply that increasing emissions not only leads to immediate economic growth, but also future economic growth, both linearly and nonlinearly. In addition, the findings from cointegration and causality analysis in multivariate settings do not support the argument that reducing emissions and/or fossil fuel consumption does not lead to a slowdown in economic growth in China. The novel empirical findings are useful for policy makers in relation to fossil fuel consumption, emissions, and economic growth. Using the novel findings, governments can make better decisions regarding energy conservation and emission reductions policies without undermining the pace of economic growth in the long run.
    Relation: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
    Appears in Collections:[財務金融學系] 期刊論文

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