4.6 Article

Economic Growth in Six ASEAN Countries: Are Energy, Human Capital and Financial Development Playing Major Roles?

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su14084540

Keywords

economic growth; energy consumption; human capital; financial development; ASEAN countries

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This study investigates the importance of energy consumption, human capital, and financial development on economic growth in six ASEAN countries from 1995 to 2017. The results suggest that these variables positively contribute to the economic growth of the countries. However, the countries still heavily rely on physical capital and labor for their economic growth.
This study aims to investigate whether energy consumption, human capital and financial development played an important role in economic growth using a panel dataset of six ASEAN countries over the period 1995-2017. Various econometric techniques-the cross-sectional dependence, panel unit root, panel cointegration, long-run panel estimates, and panel Granger causality tests-are applied. The results of panel data analyses show that all the selected variables positively contribute to the economic growth of the countries. However, all the six ASEAN countries still rely primarily on physical capital and labour for their economic growth. The findings of country-wise tests indicate that there exists a positive relationship between economic growth and financial development in Cambodia, while human capital positively contributes to the economic growth of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam. The causality test exhibits unidirectional causality from energy consumption to economic growth and from economic growth to financial development in both the short and long run. The findings suggest that inclusive development strategies that provide the opportunity for all sectors to grow will result in the desirable three e's of sustainable economic development: equitable, effective and efficient.

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