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Browsing by Author "Ehigiamusoe, Kizito Uyi"

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    How does technological innovation moderate the environmental impacts of economic growth, natural resource rents and trade openness?
    (Academic Press, 2024) Ehigiamusoe, Kizito Uyi; Dogan, Eyup; Ramakrishnan, Suresh; Binsaeed, Rima H.; 0000-0003-0476-5177; AGÜ, Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, Ekonomi Bölümü; Dogan, Eyüp
    The objective of this study is to unravel the linear impacts of economic growth, technological innovation, natural resource rents and trade openness on carbon emissions in Malaysia during 1980–2021. It also unveils the moderating role of technological innovation on the impacts of economic growth, natural resource rents and trade openness on carbon emissions. It further analyses the nonlinear relationship between technological innovation and carbon emissions. It estimates the parameters with the Autoregressive Distributed Lag model technique. The results of the linear model reveal that economic growth, natural resource rents and trade openness contributes to carbon emissions while technological innovation mitigates carbon emissions. The disaggregated analysis of natural resource rents indicates that oil rents, natural gas rents and coal rents intensify carbon emissions while mineral rents and forest rents do not contribute to carbon emissions. The disaggregated analysis of trade openness shows that exports worsen carbon emissions while imports have tenuous effect. The disaggregated analysis of technological innovation indicates that innovation by non-residents mitigate carbon emissions while innovation by residents do not alleviate carbon emissions. Moreover, evidence from the interaction model reveals that technological innovation can favourably mitigate the adverse impacts of economic growth and trade openness on carbon emissions albeit it cannot alleviate the impact of natural resource rents on carbon emissions. Besides, the nonlinear model indicates a U-shaped relationship between technological innovation and carbon emissions. Unlike previous studies that typically focused on the direct impacts of these variables, this study unravels the impacts of the disaggregated components as well as provides insights into the moderating and nonlinear effects of technological innovation on carbon emissions. The implication of this study is that efforts to achieve a carbon-neutral economy should consider the direct and indirect impacts of economic growth, technological innovation, natural resource rents and trade openness. It is recommended for Malaysia to encourage technological innovation in her quest to abate the adverse environmental impacts of economic activities.
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    The nexus between poverty, inequality and environmental pollution: Evidence across different income groups of countries
    (ELSEVIER, 2022) Ehigiamusoe, Kizito Uyi; Majeed, Muhammad Tariq; Dogan, Eyup; 0000-0003-0476-5177; AGÜ, Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, İşletme Bölümü; Dogan, Eyup
    Even though the literature has extensively focused on a number of determinants of environmental pollution, it lacks to incorporate the importance of poverty and inequality on the environment. The nexus of povertyinequality-environment is indeed in line with the agenda of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. Furthermore, the existing studies usually rely on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions as the proxy for the pollution in their analysis. This study fills the mentioned gaps by investigating the impacts of income inequality and poverty on environmental pollution using ecological footprint (a comprehensive measure of the pollution) in addition to CO2 emissions for 70 countries categorized by income groups. This research employs the dynamic panel system Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) and the Dumitrescu-Hurlin Granger causality techniques which are strong to several econometric issues that may frequently arise in the estimation procedures. The empirical outcomes show that income inequality and poverty increase carbon emissions and ecological footprint in the entire panel. However, when the panel is split into groups, the results indicate that income inequality mitigates carbon emissions and ecological footprint in high-income group but aggravates them in middle-income group. Though poverty has no significant impact on carbon emissions in high-income group, it raises the levels of carbon emissions and ecological footprint in middle-income group. This study overall implies that income inequality and poverty are significant determinants of environmental pollution. Hence, efforts to abate environmental degradation should give adequate attention to poverty and inequality in order to attain environmental sustainability.
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    The role of interaction effect between renewable energy consumption and real income in carbon emissions: Evidence from low-income countries
    (PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 2022) Ehigiamusoe, Kizito Uyi; Dogan, Eyup; 0000-0003-0476-5177; AGÜ, Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, Ekonomi Bölümü; Dogan, Eyup
    Even though the existing studies have extensively investigated the impacts of renewable energy and real income on carbon emissions, the literature overlooks the role of their interaction effect in the level of emissions. In addition, the studies have usually chosen high-income and middle-income countries as focused group. To fill these gaps in the existing body of energy-environment literature, this study investigates the impacts of real income, renewable energy consumption and their interaction effect on carbon emissions in low-income countries by employing empirical estimations that control different econometric and economic issues such as heterogeneity and cross-sectional dependence. The results reveal that renewable energy mitigates emissions; however, the interaction effect stays positive. The marginal effect of renewable energy on emissions varies with the levels of real income. Policymakers in these economies should implement policies and regulations to promote the adoption and use of renewable energy to mitigate carbon emissions. Besides, this study emphasizes that the levels of renewable energy and real income are not the only panacea to abating pollution, but the interaction effect should be considered in ensuring environmental sustainability.
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    Unravelling the moderating roles of environmental regulations on the impact of foreign direct investment on environmental sustainability
    (ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 2025) Ehigiamusoe, Kizito Uyi; Chen, Danqing; Dogan, Eyup; Binsaeed, Rima H.; 0000-0003-0476-5177; AGÜ, Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, Ekonomi Bölümü; Dogan, Eyup
    In the era of economic globalization, China attracts significant foreign direct investment (FDI) to accelerate economic prosperity. FDI inflows could have ramifications on environmental degradation (ED) despite the enactment of different environmental regulations (ERs) such as market-incentive, command-and-control as well as informal regulations. Though some studies have shown that FDI and ED have significant relationship, the moderating roles of different ERs on the environmental impact of FDI has not been empirically unraveled. This study fills this research gap by analyzing the direct impact of FDI on ED (i.e., carbon dioxide emissions, ecological footprint) using the provincial panel data. Second, it unravels the moderating roles of different ERs on the environmental impact of FDI in the provinces and regions. The results indicate that FDI directly mitigates ED, verifying the pollution halo hypothesis while ERs directly alleviate ED in China. However, the interaction between FDI and ERs do not alleviate ED in China albeit regional heterogeneity exist. The economic implication is that FDI is not a channel through which ERs enhance environmental sustainability in China. This study recommends some policy options arising from the findings.