Asymmetric openness-environment nexus in most open OIC countries: new evidence from quantile-on-quantile (QQ) estimation

被引:4
|
作者
Ali, Sajid [1 ,2 ]
Yusop, Zulkornain [1 ,3 ]
Meo, Muhammad Saeed [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Putra, Sch Business & Econ, Seri Kembangan, Malaysia
[2] Bahauddin Zakariya Univ, Sch Econ, Multan, Pakistan
[3] UPM, Putra Business Sch, Seri Kembangan, Malaysia
[4] Super Univ, Dept Management Sci, Lahore, Pakistan
[5] RUDN Univ, Lab Gas Technol & Sustainable Dev, Moscow, Russia
关键词
CO2 emissions (CO2); Ecological footprint (ECOF); Quantile-on-quantile (QQ) approach; Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC); TRADE OPENNESS; CO2; EMISSIONS; KUZNETS CURVE; ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT; HYPOTHESIS; GROWTH; DEFORESTATION; IMPACTS; ENERGY;
D O I
10.1007/s11356-021-17473-8
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Trade openness continues to have the potential to influence many parts of today's society, including religion, transportation, lifestyle, language, and international relations; however, its ability to impact environmental quality is the primary issue for environmental policy guidelines. In response to an increasing interest in finding the dynamic association between trade openness and environmental quality, the current study explores the trade openness- environmental quality nexus in the ten most open Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) countries for the years 1991 to 2018. By taking CO2 emissions and ecological footprint as environmental indicators, a novel methodology "quantile-on-quantile (QQ)" is used to indicate how different quantiles of trade openness asymmetrically affect the quantiles of environmental indicators by providing an adequate pattern to comprehend the overall dependence structure. A negative openness-CO2 emissions association is dominant in seven out of ten selected OIC countries (i.e., Suriname, Malaysia, Jordan, UAE, Libya, Brunei, and Qatar). On the other hand, a positive impact of trade openness on ecological footprint is dominant in eight out of ten selected OIC countries (i.e., Oman, Jordan, UAE, Libya, Bahrain, Brunei, Qatar, and Kuwait). The outcomes indicate that the asymmetric strength of openness-induced environmental quality differs with countries at both upper and bottom quantiles of data distribution that need specific attention in contending trade and environment policies in OIC countries.
引用
收藏
页码:26352 / 26370
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Asymmetric trade uncertainty-environmental quality nexus: evidence from quantile estimation
    Yu, Zeyi
    Nazar, Raima
    Ali, Sajid
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, 2024, 33 (07): : 1410 - 1432
  • [22] Nexus between economic risk and political risk in the United Kingdom: Evidence from wavelet coherence and quantile-on-quantile approaches
    Ayhan, Fatih
    Kartal, Mustafa Tevfik
    Adebayo, Tomiwa Sunday
    Kirikkaleli, Dervis
    BULLETIN OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH, 2023, 75 (03) : 571 - 587
  • [23] Asymmetric effect of financial stress on China?s precious metals market: Evidence from a quantile-on-quantile regression
    Chen, Jinyu
    Wang, Yilin
    Ren, Xiaohang
    RESEARCH IN INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE, 2023, 64
  • [24] Asymmetric impact of temperature on COVID-19 spread in India: Evidence from quantile-on-quantile regression approach
    Irfan, Muhammad
    Razzaq, Asif
    Suksatan, Wanich
    Sharif, Arshian
    Elavarasan, Rajvikram Madurai
    Yang, Chuxiao
    Hao, Yu
    Rauf, Abdul
    JOURNAL OF THERMAL BIOLOGY, 2022, 104
  • [25] Asymmetric effect of financial globalization on carbon emissions in G7 countries: Fresh insight from quantile-on-quantile regression
    Adebayo, Tomiwa Sunday
    Akadiri, Seyi Saint
    Akpan, Usenobong
    Aladenika, Bisola
    Energy and Environment, 2023, 34 (05): : 1285 - 1304
  • [26] The asymmetric effects of oil price shocks on the world food prices: Fresh evidence from quantile-on-quantile regression approach
    Sun, Yunpeng
    Gao, Pengpeng
    Raza, Syed Ali
    Shah, Nida
    Sharif, Arshian
    ENERGY, 2023, 270
  • [27] Asymmetric nexus between pandemic uncertainty and public health spendings: Evidence from quantile estimation
    Teng, Chenmei
    Zhu, Xiaoya
    Nazar, Raima
    Kanwal, Tahira
    RISK ANALYSIS, 2024, 44 (04) : 991 - 1006
  • [28] Asymmetric effect of financial globalization on carbon emissions in G7 countries: Fresh insight from quantile-on-quantile regression
    Adebayo, Tomiwa Sunday
    Akadiri, Seyi Saint
    Akpan, Usenobong
    Aladenika, Bisola
    ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT, 2023, 34 (05) : 1285 - 1304
  • [29] How Air Quality Affect Health Industry Stock Returns: New Evidence From the Quantile-on-Quantile Regression
    Liu, Lu
    Wang, Kai-Hua
    Xiao, Yidong
    FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 9
  • [30] Asymmetric effects of commodity and stock market on Chinese green market: Evidence from wavelet-based quantile-on-quantile approach
    Niu, Hongli
    Zhang, Shasha
    RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2024, 230