4.7 Article

Dynamic association between ICT, renewable energy, economic complexity and ecological footprint: Is there any difference between E-7 (developing) and G-7 (developed) countries?

Journal

TECHNOLOGY IN SOCIETY
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.techsoc.2021.101853

Keywords

ICT; Renewable energy; Economic complexity; Human capital; E-7 and G-7 countries

Funding

  1. National Social Science Foundation Project of China [21BJL008]

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This empirical research investigates the relationship between ICT, renewable energy, economic complexity, human capital, financial development, and ecological footprint in E-7 and G-7 countries from 1995 to 2018. The findings suggest that ICT, economic complexity, and human capital increase pollution levels, while renewable energy significantly reduces them. In G-7 countries, all factors except financial development improve environmental quality. Additionally, the interaction between ICT and human capital reduces the ecological footprint level in both panel countries.
This empirical research scrutinizes the nexus between information and communication technologies (ICT), renewable energy, economic complexity, human capital, financial development, and ecological footprint for E-7 and G-7 countries over the period from 1995 to 2018. We use four variables (Mobile cellular subscription, fixed broadband subscription, fixed telephone subscription, Internet consumers) for the ICT index prepared through principal component analysis. For empirical analysis, after testing the cross-sectional dependency, this study performs the second-generation method. From the E-7 countries' perspective, the empirical results reveal that ICT, economic complexity, and human capital increase the pollution level while renewable energy significantly reduces it. The estimated financial development coefficient is established to be statistically insignificant. In G-7 countries, all potential factors significantly improve the environmental quality except financial development. Moreover, the interaction between ICT and human capital significantly reduces the ecological footprint level in both panel countries. Therefore, we can observe that there is a wide discrepancy in these countries. The only common thing is that in these countries, bidirectional causality is discovered between ICT, human capital, and ecological footprint. Based on these empirical findings, several practice policy implications for ICT, renewable energy, economic complexity, human capital, financial development, and ecological footprint are discussed.

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