Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countries

Economic growth via urbanization helps in the accumulation of capital in the urban area. Again, to meet up the urban demand, energy consumption increases sharply, and consequently as the byproduct, magnitude of carbon emission also increases in the environment. The existing literature did not focus...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ramesh Chandra Das, Tonmoy Chatterjee, Enrico Ivaldi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-09-01
Series:Ecological Indicators
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X2300523X
_version_ 1797802867808010240
author Ramesh Chandra Das
Tonmoy Chatterjee
Enrico Ivaldi
author_facet Ramesh Chandra Das
Tonmoy Chatterjee
Enrico Ivaldi
author_sort Ramesh Chandra Das
collection DOAJ
description Economic growth via urbanization helps in the accumulation of capital in the urban area. Again, to meet up the urban demand, energy consumption increases sharply, and consequently as the byproduct, magnitude of carbon emission also increases in the environment. The existing literature did not focus upon the high trajectory of carbon emission following urbanization. There is, thus, an interlink too between income growth and magnitudes of urbanization. Therefore, the co-movements between income and urbanization, and the connotation among income, urbanization, energy use and Green House Gas emissions are an area to be explored for the highly polluting nations. This study thus aims to investigate whether income, urbanization, energy uses and GHG emissions are cointegrated or having co-movements for the world’s top 20 polluting nations for the period 1970–2018. The study first underpins a theoretical background for the association among the four indicators and then goes for empirical verifications using time series econometric exercise. Using Johansen cointegration test and Vector Error Correction Model (VECM) for the variables the results show that the variables have long run associations as well as short run causal interplays in mostly the developed countries of the list. Income and urbanization have latent explanatory powers through energy use and GHG emissions. Hence, the policy makers of the concerned countries should focus on controlling the process of urbanization in order to manage energy use and GHG emissions to ultimately reach to the end of sustainable development.
first_indexed 2024-03-13T05:13:17Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a4340610d14147df80a230921c60e24c
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1470-160X
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-13T05:13:17Z
publishDate 2023-09-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Ecological Indicators
spelling doaj.art-a4340610d14147df80a230921c60e24c2023-06-16T05:08:36ZengElsevierEcological Indicators1470-160X2023-09-01153110381Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countriesRamesh Chandra Das0Tonmoy Chatterjee1Enrico Ivaldi2Department of Economics, Vidyasagar University, IndiaDepartment of Economics, Bhairab Ganguly College, Kolkata, WB, IndiaDepartment of Political and International Science, University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy; Corresponding author.Economic growth via urbanization helps in the accumulation of capital in the urban area. Again, to meet up the urban demand, energy consumption increases sharply, and consequently as the byproduct, magnitude of carbon emission also increases in the environment. The existing literature did not focus upon the high trajectory of carbon emission following urbanization. There is, thus, an interlink too between income growth and magnitudes of urbanization. Therefore, the co-movements between income and urbanization, and the connotation among income, urbanization, energy use and Green House Gas emissions are an area to be explored for the highly polluting nations. This study thus aims to investigate whether income, urbanization, energy uses and GHG emissions are cointegrated or having co-movements for the world’s top 20 polluting nations for the period 1970–2018. The study first underpins a theoretical background for the association among the four indicators and then goes for empirical verifications using time series econometric exercise. Using Johansen cointegration test and Vector Error Correction Model (VECM) for the variables the results show that the variables have long run associations as well as short run causal interplays in mostly the developed countries of the list. Income and urbanization have latent explanatory powers through energy use and GHG emissions. Hence, the policy makers of the concerned countries should focus on controlling the process of urbanization in order to manage energy use and GHG emissions to ultimately reach to the end of sustainable development.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X2300523XEconomic growthCO2 emissionUrban developmentEnergy consumptionCointegrationVector error correction model
spellingShingle Ramesh Chandra Das
Tonmoy Chatterjee
Enrico Ivaldi
Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countries
Ecological Indicators
Economic growth
CO2 emission
Urban development
Energy consumption
Cointegration
Vector error correction model
title Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countries
title_full Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countries
title_fullStr Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countries
title_full_unstemmed Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countries
title_short Co-movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution: An investigation for world’s leading polluting countries
title_sort co movements of income and urbanization through energy use and pollution an investigation for world s leading polluting countries
topic Economic growth
CO2 emission
Urban development
Energy consumption
Cointegration
Vector error correction model
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X2300523X
work_keys_str_mv AT rameshchandradas comovementsofincomeandurbanizationthroughenergyuseandpollutionaninvestigationforworldsleadingpollutingcountries
AT tonmoychatterjee comovementsofincomeandurbanizationthroughenergyuseandpollutionaninvestigationforworldsleadingpollutingcountries
AT enricoivaldi comovementsofincomeandurbanizationthroughenergyuseandpollutionaninvestigationforworldsleadingpollutingcountries