4.5 Article

Nexus between Economic Policy Uncertainty and Renewable Energy Consumption in BRIC Nations: The Mediating Role of Foreign Direct Investment and Financial Development

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14154687

Keywords

economic policy uncertainty; renewable energy consumption; foreign direct investment; financial development; BRIC

Categories

Funding

  1. National Social Science Fund of China Research on the Optimization Path and Welfare Effect of China's Import Structure Upgrading under the Background of High-Quality Development [19CJL046]
  2. Special Funds for Basic Scientific Research in Central Universities Research on welfare effect and optimization path of energy digital economy construction [800015A367]

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This study explores the impact of economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on renewable energy consumption (REC), finding adverse effects of EPU on REC in both long-run and short-run, and a positive statistically significant linkage between foreign direct investment (FDI) and financial development (FD) to REC. The findings suggest the critical significance of FDI and FD in enhancing clean energy integration through the application of renewable energy.
In recent literature, the impact of economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on macro aspects have been investigated, but the aspect of energy, precisely renewable energy still to explore. The motivation of the study is to produce fresh evidence regarding the nexus between EPU and renewable energy consumption (REC) with the mediating role of forcing direct investment (FDI) and financial development (FD) in BRIC nations for the period 1997q1-2018q4. The study applied unit root tests following Ng-Perron and Zivot and Andrews for detecting variable's stationary properties. The long-run cointegration was evaluated by implementing Bayer, Hanck combined the cointegration test, Bound testing approach, and t(BDM) test. Both linear and non-linear ARDL were implemented to evaluate long-run and short-run shocks, and directional causality was assessed through a non-granger causality test. Furthermore, the study implemented robustness by implementing fully-modified OLS, dynamic OLS, and canonical cointegrating regression (CCR). Unit root test established the variables are stationary after the first difference; moreover, the Bayer and Hanck cointegration test confirmed the long-run association between EPU, FD, FD, and REC in BRIC nations. Accruing to ARDL estimation, adverse effects running from EPU to REC both in the long run and short run. Furthermore, the positive statistically significant linkage revealed for FDI and FD to REC implies that clean energy integration could be augmented with continual inflows of FDI and development of the financial sector. Model estimation with asymmetric assumption, the study documented asymmetric effects running from EPU, FDI, and FD to renewable energy consumption, especially in the long run. Finally, the directional causality revealed unidirectional causality between REC and EPU, whereas the feedback hypothesis was disclosed for FDI and REC] and FD and REC. Study findings postulated that the role of foreign direct investment and financial development is critically significant because technological advancement and capital investment augment clean energy integration through the application of renewable energy.

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