4.7 Article

Educational attainment and environmental Kuznets curve in China: an aggregate and disaggregate analysis

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 30, Pages 45612-45622

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-19051-y

Keywords

Education; Environmental Kuznets curve; China

Funding

  1. Major projects of Hebei Provincial Department of Education: Research on the development and innovation of modern agriculture in poor areas of Hebei Province from the perspective of economic and technological cooperation [ZD201713]

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This study evaluates the impact of education on CO2 emissions in China and tests the EKC hypothesis. The study finds that education has a positive effect on CO2 emissions at the initial level, but a negative effect when considering the square of education. Economic growth also has a positive effect on CO2 emissions, but its square has a negative effect. Therefore, China should increase investment in human capital to promote green growth and environmental quality.
The primary focus of this study is to evaluate the impact of various levels of education on CO2 emissions in China. Moreover, the study also tested the EKC hypothesis for different levels of education and economic development. The analysis employed disaggregate and aggregate data for education that included enrollment at primary, secondary, and tertiary levels and the average year of schooling. For empirical analysis, we employed an error correction model and bounds testing approach to cointegration. The results of the study provided some useful information both in the short and long run. All the proxies of education positively impact CO2 emissions at the initial level both in the short and long run; however, when we take the square of these variables, the effects of education on CO2 emissions become negative. Similarly, the impact of economic growth on CO2 emissions is positive in the short and long run, and the square of economic growth on CO2 emissions is negative, supporting the EKC hypothesis. China should increase investment in human capital that promotes green growth and environmental quality.

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