Environmental Tax, Environmental Related Grant, and Corruption: The Implications for Green Growth and Natural Resource Management in Sub-Saharan Africa
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University of Ghana
Abstract
This thesis investigates the complex relationship between environmental taxation, corruption, and
environmental-related grants in sub-Saharan Africa, focusing on natural resource depletion and
green growth. The first study examines the moderating role of corruption in the relationship
between environmental tax and natural resource depletion, employing multiple econometric
methods. Findings reveal that while environmental taxes increase resource depletion, corruption
control reduces depletion. Key control variables, such as energy use and urbanisation, also
significantly affect depletion, underscoring the importance of corruption control in enhancing
environmental tax effectiveness. The second paper examines how environmental taxes and
corruption affect green growth across different quantiles, using the Method of Moments Quantile
Regression (MMQR) on 15 countries from 2000 to 2020. Results show that the moderating effect
of corruption becomes more significant at higher quantiles of green growth, with the strongest
impact observed at the 9th quantile. This suggests that environmental taxes are more effective in
promoting green growth in countries with stronger corruption control. The findings emphasise the
need for tailored environmental tax policies based on the corruption level of individual countries.
The third paper investigates the combined impact of environmental taxes and environment-related
grants on green growth using an autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model and MMQR
analysis. Results indicate that environmental taxes alone do not significantly impact green growth.
However, the interaction between environmental taxes and grants significantly enhances CO2
productivity. It reduces energy intensity, highlighting the value of a mixed policy approach that
integrates economic incentives with capacity-building support. The thesis makes several significant contributions to the understanding of environmental policy
effectiveness in sub-Saharan Africa, both empirically and theoretically. It advances the literature
by elucidating the nuanced role of corruption as a moderating factor in the relationship between
environmental taxation and natural resource depletion, highlighting that while environmental taxes
alone may inadvertently increase resource use, effective corruption control can mitigate this
adverse effect. This finding enriches the theoretical discourse on environmental governance
accounting and environmental economics by emphasizing the importance of institutional quality
in policy outcomes. The second study extends this understanding by demonstrating that the
efficacy of environmental taxes in promoting green growth varies across different levels of
development, with corruption control becoming increasingly critical at higher green growth
quantiles. This suggests a threshold effect and underscores the need for context-specific policy
design, contributing to the literature on asymmetric effects and policy tailoring. The third paper
broadens the theoretical framework by illustrating that, environmental taxes, when complemented
with environment-related grants, can synergistically enhance green productivity, emphasizing the
importance of integrated policy mixes. Collectively, these studies contribute to the theoretical
understanding of how institutional factors, such as corruption, interact with fiscal instruments and
grants to influence environmental and economic outcomes. They also provide a nuanced
perspective that highlights the importance of context-dependent policy approaches, thus enriching
both the environmental economics and development policy literatures. Based on the findings, this
thesis recommends adopting a context-specific approach to environmental taxation, considering
each country's environmental grants and corruption levels. Policymakers in countries with low
corruption should leverage higher environmental taxes to drive green growth, while those in high
corruption settings should prioritise corruption control before implementing aggressive tax policies. Furthermore, the study highlights the importance of combining environmental taxes with
grants to maximise their effectiveness. Regional governments are encouraged to adopt mixed
policy frameworks integrating fiscal instruments with technical assistance to promote green
growth and natural resources. These strategies will be critical for achieving long-term
environmental sustainability and economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa.
Description
PhD. Accounting
