4.6 Article

Macro Sustainability across Countries: Key Sector Environmentally Extended Input-Output Analysis

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su132111657

Keywords

environmentally extended input-output analysis; sustainability assessment; multi-criteria decision aid; ELECTRE III; China; USA; France; Germany; Sweden; Austria

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This paper proposes a comparative sustainability assessment method using environmentally extended input-output analysis and multi-criteria decision aid, identifying key intervention pathways for sustainable development. The study shows that education, health care, construction, and financial intermediation sectors frequently rank at the top of the hierarchy in each country, with significant differences in results for China due to its economic activity concentration on primary/secondary sectors. Discussions on country-specific recommendations and reflections on economic and sustainability policy initiatives are provided.
When formulating economic development strategies, the environment and society must be considered to preserve well-being. This paper proposes a comparative sustainability assessment method using environmentally extended input-output analysis and multi-criteria decision aid. Using symmetric input-output tables and sectoral CO2 emissions and employment data for six countries, linkage coefficients are calculated for 163 sectors in each country. Multi-criteria decision aid tool, ELECTRE III, is used to derive outranking relationships among each country's sectors using these coefficients as criteria, resulting in a hierarchy of sectors ordered by sustainability. Sectors that frequently appear at the top of the six hierarchies included education, health care, construction, and financial intermediation. China's results differ significantly because of its concentration of economic activity on the primary/secondary sectors. The results can enable identification of key intervention pathways along which sustainable development could be stimulated. Country-specific recommendations and reflections on economic and sustainability policy initiatives are discussed.

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