4.7 Article

Renewable energy led Economic Growth Hypothesis: Evidence from novel panel methods for N-11 economies

Journal

RENEWABLE ENERGY
Volume 197, Issue -, Pages 790-797

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.renene.2022.07.025

Keywords

Renewable energy; Economic growth; Globalization; Non-parametric panel method

Funding

  1. School-level talent introduction project of Anhui Science and Technology University [SRC2014413]

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This study examines the role of cleaner energy, specifically renewable energy, in emerging economies and finds that renewable energy only boosts economic growth in the short run, while globalization slows it down.
The energy-growth nexus has been explored extensively by researchers and academia; however, the role of cleaner energy, especially in the context of emerging economies, i.e., Nex-11 countries, have been ignored. Therefore, to fill the gap in the literature, this paper considers a non-parametric panel method, to test directly for the importance of renewable energy in economic performance for Next eleven (N-11) countries. The econometric estimations-which focused on a panel of N-11 countries-determined that: (i) renewable energy consumption boosts economic growth in short run only; and (ii) industry value added, human development, and consumption expenditures accelerate economic, whereas globalization decrease it. Hence, all countries need to reduce the risk associated with renewable energy so that to make them effective for economic growth. Moreover, there is a need to provide different types of invested capital for ongoing activities of renewable energy production. In general, this study provides relevant policy implications in the context of renewable energy, globalisation and economic growth for the Nex-11 economies.

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