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Advances in Decision Sciences (ADS)

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Carbon emissions and the rising effect of foreign direct investment and trade openness: Evidence from panel data countries

Carbon emissions and the rising effect of foreign direct investment and trade openness: Evidence from panel data countries

Title

Carbon emissions and the rising effect of foreign direct investment and trade openness: Evidence from panel data countries

Authors

  • Alina Maydybura
    Department of Business and Management RIT Dubai, Dubai, UAE
  • Ali Gohar Chang
    Principal IBA Public School Sukkur, Sindh, Pakistan
  • Khalil Ahmed Channa
    Department of Business Administration, Sukkur IBA University, Sukkur, Sindh, Pakistan
  • Shin-Hung Pan
    Department of Information Management, Chaoyang University of Technology, Taiwan
  • Haitham M. ALZOUBI
    School of Business, Skyline University College, Sharjah, UAE
    Applied Science Research Center, Applied Science Private University, Amman, Jordan
  • Bisharat Hussain Chang
    Department of Business Administration Sukkur IBA University

Abstract

Purpose: The study aims to investigate the effect of FDI and FTO on carbon emissions using sectoral data from 30 industries in China from 2001 to 2024. It will document both the positive and negative influences of FDI and FTO on carbon emissions, presenting a fresh perspective on these economic factors and their relation to environmental sustainability.
Design/methodology/approach: The research employed a rigorous threshold regression model to explore the relationship between FDI+FTO and carbon emission. Panel data of industries in China was meticulously analyzed, indicating the changes in sectors and the impacts of controlled variables. This comprehensive approach ensures the validity and reliability of our findings.
Findings: The empirical results confirm that FDI and FTO affect sectoral carbon emissions nonlinearly. FDI suppresses carbon dioxide emissions when lower emission threshold values are considered, while FDI at higher thresholds increases them. Similarly, as FTO reduces carbon emissions in high-intensity sectors, carbon emissions increase in low-intensity ones. The control variables concerning carbon emissions are also explained.
Practical implications: Policy initiatives based on the peculiar features of each variable would promote FDI in industries with low emissions and regulate FTO in sectors with high carbon intensity. This would balance economic growth with environmental sustainability.
Originality/value: The paper contributes to the extant literature by analyzing the relationship between FDI, FTO, and carbon emissions within a sector-specific threshold regression analysis framework. It illustrates the complex dynamics of international trade and investment in environmental outcomes.

Keywords

Foreign direct investment; Threshold impact threshold regression; foreign trade openness.

Classification-JEL

F18, F21, Q53, Q56, O13

Pages

1-22

Special Issue on

Decision Science in Energy Economics and Environment for Reducing Carbon Footprint and Achieving Sustainable Development Goals

How to Cite

Alina Maydybura, Ali Gohar Chang, Khalil Ahmed Channa, Shin-Hung Pan, Haitham M. ALZOUBI, & Chang, B. H. (2024). Carbon emissions and the rising effect of foreign direct investment and trade openness: Evidence from panel data countries. Advances in Decision Sciences, 28(4), 1-22.

https://doi.org/10.47654/v28y2024i4p1-22

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ISSN 2090-3359 (Print)
ISSN 2090-3367 (Online)

Asia University, Taiwan

Scientific and Business World

4.7
2023CiteScore
 
86th percentile
Powered by  Scopus
SCImago Journal & Country Rank
Q2 in Scopus
CiteScore 2023 = 4.7
CiteScoreTracker 2024 = 8.5
SNIP 2023 = 0.799
SJR Quartile = Q1
SJR 2024 = 0.814
H-Index = 20

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