← Volver a resultados
Ficha bibliográfica · Consulta y acceso
Artículo de revista

Asymmetric impacts of finance, energy use, and innovation on China's carbon emissions

Thi Tuyet Mai Vu et al · Elsevier · 2026

Acceso institucional disponible
Lectura rápida. Revisá los datos básicos del recurso y luego accedé al contenido desde el botón principal. En esta ficha solo se muestra la información necesaria para identificar la obra, citarla y abrirla.
Publicación seriada

A beyond GDP approach in times of economic recession. The case of Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) for Greece during 1995 to 2022

Esta publicación seriada contiene 148 contenidos relacionados.

Acceso al recurso

Entrá al contenido desde la opción principal o elegí otra fuente disponible.

Acceso principal

Acceso institucional disponible

El acceso puede requerir institución, suscripción, proxy, VPN o autenticación.
Abrir acceso

Resumen

Descripción general del contenido del recurso.

The tension between economic expansion and climate mitigation necessitates a deeper understanding of how finance, energy demand, and innovation jointly shape carbon emissions in emerging economies. In China, rapid financial deepening, rising energy consumption, and growing research and development (R&D) investment have evolved simultaneously, yet their asymmetric environmental effects remain unclear. This study examines the dynamic and nonlinear relationship between financial development, energy consumption, R&D expenditure, and CO2 emissions in China over 1990–2022.The baseline model applies a nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) framework, decomposing explanatory variables into positive and negative partial sums to capture asymmetric short- and long-run effects. GDP per capita and trade openness are included as controls, and cointegration is verified through bounds testing. Dynamic multipliers trace adjustment paths, while robustness is assessed using alternative measures of CO2 emissions (per capita), financial development indicators, definitions of energy consumption, and lag selection criteria.Results show that a 1% increase in energy consumption raises CO2 emissions by approximately 0.75–0.80% in the long run, whereas reductions yield smaller effects. Financial development increases emissions mainly through expansionary shocks, confirming dominant scale effects. In contrast, a 1% increase in R&D expenditure reduces emissions by about 0.30–0.40%, with insignificant reverse effects.Policy implications include accelerating the phase-down of coal and the deployment of renewables, embedding climate-based credit allocation rules into financial regulation, and institutionalizing sustained R&D expansion to secure long-term emission reductions under asymmetric economic dynamics.

Cómo citar

Elegí el formato que necesitás y copiá la referencia al portapapeles.

APA 7

al, T. T. M. V. E. (2026). Asymmetric impacts of finance, energy use, and innovation on China's carbon emissions. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indic.2026.101214

MLA

al, Thi Tuyet Mai Vu et. "Asymmetric impacts of finance, energy use, and innovation on China's carbon emissions." 2026. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indic.2026.101214.

Chicago

al, Thi Tuyet Mai Vu et. 2026. "Asymmetric impacts of finance, energy use, and innovation on China's carbon emissions.". https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indic.2026.101214.

Harvard

al, T. T. M. V. E. 2026, Asymmetric impacts of finance, energy use, and innovation on China's carbon emissions, Elsevier, available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indic.2026.101214 [Accessed 29 Jun. 2026].

Compartir e imprimir

Guardá la ficha, copiá su enlace permanente o imprimila como PDF.

Exportar referencia

Si usás un gestor bibliográfico, podés exportar el registro en los formatos más comunes.

Detalles del recurso

Información bibliográfica útil para confirmar que se trata del material correcto.

Título
Asymmetric impacts of finance, energy use, and innovation on China's carbon emissions
Autor / colaboradores
Thi Tuyet Mai Vu et al
Editorial
Elsevier
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
2665-9727
ISSN
2665-9727
Idioma
eng

Materias

Explorá otros recursos relacionados a partir de estas materias.

Copiado