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The influence of shadow economy, environmental policies and geopolitical risk on renewable energy: A comparison of high- and middle-income countries

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dc.creator Doğan, Buhari
dc.creator Chu, Lan Khanh
dc.creator Ghosh, Sudeshna
dc.creator Shahbaz, Muhammad
dc.date 2023-09-15T00:00:00Z
dc.date.accessioned 2025-02-25T10:39:02Z
dc.date.available 2025-02-25T10:39:02Z
dc.identifier d450db35-c79e-4fb0-9d1a-c2d9db30f7a3
dc.identifier 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118122
dc.identifier https://avesis.sdu.edu.tr/publication/details/d450db35-c79e-4fb0-9d1a-c2d9db30f7a3/oai
dc.identifier.uri http://acikerisim.sdu.edu.tr/xmlui/handle/123456789/101497
dc.description Given the alarming rate of climate change and environmental degradation, major countries are seeking ways to curtail environmental damage and attain sustainability in the future. In the quest for a green economy, countries are motivated to adopt renewable energy that can assist in resource conservation and efficiency. Accordingly, this study examines the diverse effects of the underground economy, environmental policy strictness, geopolitical risk, gross domestic product, carbon emissions, population, and oil prices on renewable energy for 30 high- and middle-income countries from 1990 to 2018. The empirical outcomes based on quantile regression document significant variations across two country groups. For instance, for high-income countries, the shadow economy has a detrimental effect across all quantiles but it is statistically significant at the top quantiles. Nonetheless, the effect of the shadow economy on renewable energy is detrimental and significant statistically across all quantiles for middle-income countries. In the context of environmental policy stringency, the effect is positive across both country groups, though there is heterogeneity in outcomes. Geopolitical risk has a positive influence on the deployment of renewable energy for high-income countries but negatively impacts renewables for middle-income countries. As far as policy suggestions are concerned, the policymakers of both high- and middle-income countries need to take steps to constrain the growth of the shadow economy by adopting effective policy strategies. Policies need to be implemented for middle income-countries to reduce the unfavorable effect of geopolitical uncertainty. The findings of this study contribute to a better and more precise understanding of factors shaping the role of renewables whereby the energy crisis would be mitigated.
dc.language eng
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.title The influence of shadow economy, environmental policies and geopolitical risk on renewable energy: A comparison of high- and middle-income countries
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/article


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