4.7 Article

Causal Linkage among Agricultural Insurance, Air Pollution, and Agricultural Green Total Factor Productivity in United States: Pairwise Granger Causality Approach

Journal

AGRICULTURE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture12091320

Keywords

agricultural green total factor productivity; agricultural insurance; AGTFP; air pollution; panel auto-regressive distributed lags method; United States; PM2.5

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Agricultural insurance and green agriculture are closely related, as agricultural insurance motivates farmers to adopt environmentally friendly practices and reduces the use of chemicals in the environment. The study shows that there is a significant relationship between agricultural insurance, air pollution, and agricultural green production, with expanding agricultural insurance having the potential to boost green production but also exacerbate air pollution.
Agricultural insurance and green agriculture are strongly related. Agricultural insurance not only motivates farmers to adopt environmentally friendly production technology and enhances the effectiveness of production, but it also accomplishes the goal of lowering the number of chemicals that are put into the environment. This article investigates the dynamic relationship between agricultural insurance, air pollution, and agricultural green total factor productivity. To complete the aim, the authors used the panel auto-regressive distributed lags method (PMG method) and panel data from 50 states of the United States between 2005 and 2019. The empirical findings demonstrate a considerable co-integration and a cross-sectional reliance between agricultural insurance, air pollution, and agricultural green total factor production. Expanding agricultural insurance may boost agricultural green whole factor output but also exacerbate air pollution. However, significant air pollution does not increase agricultural production's green total factor productivity. The panel Granger causality test shows a one-way causal relationship between agricultural insurance, green total factor productivity, and air pollution. A one-way causal relationship exists between air pollution and agricultural green total factor productivity. The author concluded that improving agricultural insurance coverage or cutting down on air pollution will boost agricultural green total factor output. These findings have long-term policy and management repercussions, particularly for those involved in agriculture policy and environmental management.

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