2021
DOI: 10.1002/sd.2236
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The dynamic linkage between remittances, export diversification, education, renewable energy consumption, economic growth, and CO2 emissions in top remittance‐receiving countries

Abstract: In recent years, the literature on financial development, public finance, and other areas has substantially increased; however, remittances are among the most neglected sources with significantly larger resource inflow that may serve the purpose of reducing environmental degradation. The literature on export diversification and education is also limited, with conflicting findings. With this in mind, the current research examined the relationship among remittances, export diversification, education, and CO2 emi… Show more

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Cited by 153 publications
(61 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
(77 reference statements)
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“…(2019) argue that remittances have an asymmetric effect on CO2 emissions in China However, some literature argues that remittances have a positive impact on environmental quality. For instance, Zafar et al (2021) used the Westerlund and Edgerton cointegration approach on a panel of 22 countries concluded that remittances reduce CO2 emission and therefore reduces environmental degradation. Other studies argue that remittances do not have any significant impact on the environmental outcome.…”
Section: Remittance and Environment Nexusmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…(2019) argue that remittances have an asymmetric effect on CO2 emissions in China However, some literature argues that remittances have a positive impact on environmental quality. For instance, Zafar et al (2021) used the Westerlund and Edgerton cointegration approach on a panel of 22 countries concluded that remittances reduce CO2 emission and therefore reduces environmental degradation. Other studies argue that remittances do not have any significant impact on the environmental outcome.…”
Section: Remittance and Environment Nexusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A few attempts have been made to empirically examine the impact of diaspora income on the environment (Ahmad et al 2019;Elbatanony et al 2021;Kibria 2021;Usman and Jahanger 2021;Yang et al 2020;Yang et al 2021;Zafar et al 2021). While the research outcomes predominantly suggest that diaspora income contributes to environmental degradation, it is noteworthy that Zafar et al (2021) report that diaspora income reduces environmental degradation, while find no relationship between the two variables for China and India. This suggests that the impact of diaspora income on the environment may vary across countries or regions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The empirical studies on the nexus between education and CO 2 emissions have stayed inconclusive in line with the theoretical considerations. Duarte et al [41], Uddin [29], Wang et al [42], Li and Ullah [43] revealed a decreasing effect of education on CO 2 emissions, but Li and Zhou [44] and Zafar et al [45] discovered an increasing effect of education on CO 2 emissions. Furthermore, Khan [46] and Cui et al [47] reached findings incompatible with the EKC hypothesis.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Li and Zhou [44] explored the relationship among demographic characteristics, higher education, and CO 2 emissions in China via fully modified ordinary least squares and disclosed a positive effect of higher education on CO 2 emissions in East China. Zafar et al [45] also explored the factors underlying CO 2 emissions in 22 top remittance-receiving countries for 1986-2017 via Westerlund and Edgerton cointegration test and discovered a positive influence of education on CO 2 emissions.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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