Geopolitical risk spillover among nations: evidence from Russia

被引:0
|
作者
Osama D. Sweidan
机构
[1] United Arab Emirates University,Department of Innovation in Government and Society
来源
GeoJournal | 2023年 / 88卷
关键词
Geopolitical risk; Oil price; Russia; ARDL model; C22; E02; F51; Q41;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Many scholars have empirically tested the influence of geopolitical risk on economic activities and financial indicators. This paper attracts a new research strand by investigating the geopolitical risk determinants. More precisely, we examine if the international geopolitical risk of a selected group of countries spills over to Russia. Alternatively, it inspects if the geopolitical tension among nations is cointegrated. This group of countries includes the United States, Germany, China, and Ukraine. The current paper designed and computed an empirical model using the Autoregressive Distributed Lag model (ARDL) during the period 1993:01–2022:05. The results reveal that the international geopolitical risk of Russia is cointegrated with the other four nations. In the short run, the international geopolitical risk of the four nations spills over to Russia by increasing its international geopolitical risk. While in the long run, the same impacts persist. But the effect of the United States' geopolitical risk becomes statistically insignificant. The results also show that Germany has the largest effect on Russia’s geopolitical risk in the long run. Moreover, the increase in oil prices overflows Russia by decreasing its international geopolitical risk. Thus, rival nations should reach a settlement to reduce the geopolitical tension. Otherwise, the world economic performance will deteriorate.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:3029 / 3037
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Volatility interconnectedness among financial and geopolitical markets: Evidence from COVID-19 and Ukraine-Russia crises
    Hoque, Mohammad Enamul
    Sahabuddin, Mohammad
    Bilgili, Faik
    ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY, 2024, 82 : 303 - 320
  • [12] Firm reaction to geopolitical crises: Evidence from the Russia-Ukraine conflict
    Ul Alam, Md Asif
    Devos, Erik
    Feng, Zifeng
    JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL RESEARCH, 2023, : S163 - S182
  • [13] Multidimensional risk spillover among power, coal, and carbon markets: empirical evidence from China
    Tang, Jian
    Ren, Zheng Yu
    Chen, Hsing Hung
    Qiao, Sen
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2024, 31 (01) : 1288 - 1303
  • [14] Multidimensional risk spillover among power, coal, and carbon markets: empirical evidence from China
    Jian Tang
    Zheng Yu Ren
    Hsing Hung Chen
    Sen Qiao
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2024, 31 : 1244 - 1259
  • [15] Geopolitical Risk and Corporate ESG Performance: Evidence from China
    Kuai, Yicheng
    Wang, Huixin
    EMERGING MARKETS FINANCE AND TRADE, 2024,
  • [16] Does Geopolitical Risk Matter? Evidence from South Korea
    Pyo, Dong-Jin
    DEFENCE AND PEACE ECONOMICS, 2021, 32 (01) : 87 - 106
  • [17] Does geopolitical risk affect exports? Evidence from China
    Liu, Ke
    Fu, Qiang
    Ma, Qing
    Ren, Xiang
    ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY, 2024, 81 : 1558 - 1569
  • [18] Geopolitical risk and cash holdings: evidence from an emerging economy
    Behera, Manoja
    Mahakud, Jitendra
    JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMIC POLICY, 2024,
  • [19] The bright side of geopolitical risk: evidence from Chinese firms
    Oanh, Ha Kieu
    Hoang, Khanh
    JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMIC POLICY, 2021, 13 (03) : 353 - 370
  • [20] Geopolitical risk and remittances in the Philippines: evidence from quantile causality
    Akcay, Selcuk
    Karabulutoglu, Emre
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2024,