2017
DOI: 10.1515/ldr-2017-0020
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Environmental Degradation and Economic Development in China: An Interrelated Governance Challenge

Abstract: The author argues that the deterioration of the natural environment in China provides a persuasive reason to reorient China’s economic growth towards a more sustainable path. Reconciling the development and environment imperatives needs to become an urgent priority for the Chinese government in order to avert the cascading implications that will arise in terms of social unrest, loss of further development opportunities as well as deepening income inequality. This paper thus examines the inter-relationship betw… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
(9 reference statements)
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“…The link between EG and environmental quality has long been debated (Ferguson, 2016). Developing countries with high EG rates often experience environmental degradation that disproportionately affects the poorest members of society (Alvarado & Toledo, 2017; Amesheva, 2017). Achieving economic development in an economy typically requires a trade‐off with environmental deterioration (Hashmi & Alam, 2019), as increased production and urbanization lead to more pollution and CE.…”
Section: Methodology and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The link between EG and environmental quality has long been debated (Ferguson, 2016). Developing countries with high EG rates often experience environmental degradation that disproportionately affects the poorest members of society (Alvarado & Toledo, 2017; Amesheva, 2017). Achieving economic development in an economy typically requires a trade‐off with environmental deterioration (Hashmi & Alam, 2019), as increased production and urbanization lead to more pollution and CE.…”
Section: Methodology and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study explained a positive consumer behavior on two-sustainability-focused companies, while there was no in favor of low price reaction when the consumers are aware of the firm with poor environmental sustainability. Amesheva [24] touched upon the environmental impact on development and social inequality along with recent legislative measures. As of a result, it revealed the need of reformation due to governance challenge.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…China's GDP growth rate (9.5%) was also significantly higher than the global average annual growth rate (2.9%) over the same period [18]. However, owing to the inherent vulnerability of China's ecological environment, social and economic pressures in the development process, and insufficient awareness of ecological and resource conservation, China's economic development came at the expense of abnormal consumption of resources and severe ecology deterioration [22,23]. During the rapid economic development, tremendous changes also occurred in the ecological environment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%