Trade-induced environmental quality: the role of factor endowment and environmental regulation in Africa
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Climate and Development
Abstract
This paper investigates whether trade liberalization affects environmental quality (proxied by CO2
emissions) and, if so, whether the trade-induced emissions originate from differences in countries’
economic growth, factor endowment or environmental regulations. We used panel data on 30 African
countries and the Generalized Method of Moment estimation techniques. Though we found that trade
openness is associated with elevated levels of CO2 emissions due to comparative advantage
originating from factor endowment (i.e. composition effect), the overall effects of trade are seen to
have some beneficial effects on environmental quality. Also, relative economic growth lowers
emissions (scale effect) perhaps due to technology transfer. Furthermore, the differences in
environmental regulations do not directly affect CO2 emissions while past levels of CO2 emissions
significantly increase the current level due to the cumulative effect of CO2 emissions. To achieve a
significant reduction in emissions, environmental regulations must be enforced in tandem with growth
enhancing and production technology choice policies.
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Research Article
Citation
Daniel Kwabena Twerefou, Wisdom Akpalu & Angela Cindy Emefa Mensah (2019) Trade-induced environmental quality: the role of factor endowment and environmental regulation in Africa, Climate and Development, 11:9, 786-798, DOI: 10.1080/17565529.2018.1562868