4.6 Article

Industrial growth, health care policy uncertainty and carbon emissions: Do trade and tax policy uncertainties matter for sustainable development in the USA?

Journal

STRUCTURAL CHANGE AND ECONOMIC DYNAMICS
Volume 66, Issue -, Pages 151-160

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.strueco.2023.04.005

Keywords

Health care uncertainty; Taxes uncertainty; USA; Sustainable development; Carbon dioxide emissions; Trade policy uncertainty; Green technology

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This study aims to explore the impacts of policy uncertainties on environmental sustainability, and the findings reveal both symmetric and asymmetric short-term and long-term effects of policy uncertainties on carbon emissions. Industrialization has a negative impact, while energy consumption has a significant positive impact on CO2 emissions. The study calls for dynamic approaches in carbon emissions policies and considers tax, health care, trade, and government policy uncertainties.
With the increasing policy uncertainties and the need for shielding environmental degradation among countries, understanding the connection between policy uncertainty and carbon emissions becomes necessary. This study aims to explore impacts of policy uncertainties (health care uncertainty, tax and trade policy uncertainties and others) on environmental sustainability. This objective is realized by exploring the symmetric and asymmetric impacts of industrialization and nine types of policy uncertainties on CO2 emissions in the United States of America by using augmented STIRPAT model on monthly data spanning between January 2000 and October 2021. The nature of short-term and long-term effects are explored by using ARDL model along with NARDL and MTNARDL models. The findings reveal that policy uncertainty variables have asymmetric short term and long-term impact on carbon emissions. Furthermore, industrialization reveal negative, while energy consumption shows significant positive impact on CO2 emissions. This study's outcome demands dynamic approaches in carbon emissions policies to incorporate tax, health care, trade, and government policy uncertainties. Policy -makers should pay cautious attention to the growing instabilities of different policies irrespective of the eco-nomic condition for sustainable development.

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