TY - JOUR
T1 - Do financial development, trade openness, economic development, and energy consumption affect carbon emissions for an emerging country?
AU - Khan, Abdul Gaffar
AU - Hossain, Md Afzal
AU - Chen, Songsheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - It is agreeable that the rapid progress of civilization throughout the years came at a great price for severe environmental damages. Currently, human civilization is facing the consequences of the environmental damages that have been made for centuries. As a result, taking measures that will take civilization forward yet not make any environmental damages has become a devoir. Taking these measures requires a profound knowledge of the effect of financial development and trade openness on carbon emissions. This paper inspects the association between economic development, financial development, trade openness, and energy usage on carbon emissions for an emerging nation, like Bangladesh. The paper is based on a total of 36 years of data (1980–2016). To ascertain the existence of both long-run and short-run relationships, the autoregressive distributed lag bounds testing method is applied. The outcomes expose that energy usage has a substantial influence on carbon emissions both in the short run and a long run. The influence of economic development is momentous in the long run; however, in the short run, it has no effect. The factors for trade openness and financial development are negative and immaterial equally in the short run and long run. The present study proposes that Bangladesh’s government should carry out the strategy to advance substitute energy bases that ought not to release a large amount of carbon emissions.
AB - It is agreeable that the rapid progress of civilization throughout the years came at a great price for severe environmental damages. Currently, human civilization is facing the consequences of the environmental damages that have been made for centuries. As a result, taking measures that will take civilization forward yet not make any environmental damages has become a devoir. Taking these measures requires a profound knowledge of the effect of financial development and trade openness on carbon emissions. This paper inspects the association between economic development, financial development, trade openness, and energy usage on carbon emissions for an emerging nation, like Bangladesh. The paper is based on a total of 36 years of data (1980–2016). To ascertain the existence of both long-run and short-run relationships, the autoregressive distributed lag bounds testing method is applied. The outcomes expose that energy usage has a substantial influence on carbon emissions both in the short run and a long run. The influence of economic development is momentous in the long run; however, in the short run, it has no effect. The factors for trade openness and financial development are negative and immaterial equally in the short run and long run. The present study proposes that Bangladesh’s government should carry out the strategy to advance substitute energy bases that ought not to release a large amount of carbon emissions.
KW - ARDL co-integration method
KW - Carbon emissions
KW - Economic development
KW - Energy usage
KW - Financial development
KW - Trade openness
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85103558366&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11356-021-13339-1
DO - 10.1007/s11356-021-13339-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 33797049
AN - SCOPUS:85103558366
SN - 0944-1344
VL - 28
SP - 42150
EP - 42160
JO - Environmental Science and Pollution Research
JF - Environmental Science and Pollution Research
IS - 31
ER -