4.6 Article

Asymmetric impact of fiscal decentralization and environmental innovation on carbon emissions: Evidence from highly decentralized countries

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 752-782

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0958305X211018453

Keywords

Environmental sustainability; fiscal decentralization; environmental innovation; carbon emissions; Method of Moments Quantile Regression

Funding

  1. National Social Science Foundation of China [20BJY236]

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This study investigates the relationship between fiscal decentralization, environmental innovation, and carbon emissions in decentralized countries. The findings suggest that fiscal decentralization has a greater impact on reducing carbon emissions at lower to medium levels, while environmental innovation is more effective at medium to higher levels. Additionally, economic growth and population increase contribute to higher carbon emissions, with varying effects across different emission levels.
This study examines the asymmetric link between fiscal decentralization, environmental innovation, and carbon emissions in highly decentralized countries. Our preliminary findings strictly reject the preposition of data normality and highlight that the observed relationship is quantile-dependent, which may disclose misleading results in previous studies using linear methodologies. Therefore, a novel empirical estimation technique popularized as Method of Moments Quantile Regression is employed that simultaneously deal with non-normality and structural changes. The results exhibit that fiscal decentralization significantly mitigates carbon emissions only at lower to medium emissions quantiles. On the other hand, environmental innovation reduces carbon emissions only at medium to higher emissions quantiles. Interestingly, the emissions-reducing effect of fiscal decentralization is highest for lower emissions quantiles and lowest for higher emissions quantiles. In contrast, the impact of environmental innovation is lowest for lower emissions quantiles and highest for higher emission quantiles. Economic growth and population increase carbon emissions, and their emissions-increasing effect are lowest for lower emissions quantiles and highest for higher emissions quantiles. Moreover, the heterogeneous panel causality test confirms a one-way causal association, implying that any policy intervention regarding fiscal decentralization and environmental innovation significantly affects carbon emissions.

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