Income inequality and CO2 emissions in belt and road initiative countries: the role of democracy
2020
You, Wanhai | Li, Yehua | Guo, Peng | Guo, Yawei
This paper investigates the interaction effects of income inequality and democracy on CO₂ emissions. The spatial panel model, which accounts for the spatial spillover effects across countries, is used. Using the panel data covering 41 Belt and Road initiative countries, the results indicate significant positive spatial spillovers effect to country-level CO₂ emission activity. The Kuznets Curve hypothesis, which assumes that reverse U relation presents between income and CO₂ emissions, is identified. Empirical results provide evidence that democracy levels promote the nonlinear nexus between income inequality and CO₂ emissions. High levels of inequality, ceteris paribus, in conjunction with poor democratic institutions are likely to result in higher pollution. The findings are robust to various robustness tests.
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by National Agricultural Library