The impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)

A key concern when constructing sustainable development policy is reducing the negative impact on environmental systems and maximizing human welfare. In this study, we assess how energy consumption effected on Carbon intensity of human well-being (CIWB). Using two-way fixed effects in panel regressi...

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Autores principales: Nguyen Thuan, Dang Bac Hai
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: HO CHI MINH CITY OPEN UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF SCIENCE 2021
Materias:
fdi
gdp
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/04e18d857aee48e18dac5d3071db55d6
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:04e18d857aee48e18dac5d3071db55d62021-11-15T08:41:03ZThe impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)2734-93142734-958610.46223/HCMCOUJS.econ.en.11.1.1360.2021https://doaj.org/article/04e18d857aee48e18dac5d3071db55d62021-02-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journalofscience.ou.edu.vn/index.php/econ-en/article/view/1360https://doaj.org/toc/2734-9314https://doaj.org/toc/2734-9586A key concern when constructing sustainable development policy is reducing the negative impact on environmental systems and maximizing human welfare. In this study, we assess how energy consumption effected on Carbon intensity of human well-being (CIWB). Using two-way fixed effects in panel regression, this relationship has been investigated during 2000-2018 for 9 lower middle-income countries including Algeria, Bangladesh, Egypt, India, Morocco, Pakistan, Philippines, Uzbekistan and Vietnam, while adding GDP and FDI per capita as control variables. The study reveals that the use of energy for economic development is ineffective and inconsistent with the overview of sustainable development due to the result of increasing CIWB. However, the sign of negative coefficients of GDP and FDI per capita in control variables have given the striking findings that these factors will be helpful for lower middle - income countries to pursue sustainable development by reducing CIWB.Nguyen ThuanDang Bac HaiHO CHI MINH CITY OPEN UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF SCIENCEarticleciwbenergy consumptionfdigdptwo-way fixed effects regressionEconomic theory. DemographyHB1-3840ENHo Chi Minh City Open University Journal of Science - Economics and Business Administration, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 19-28 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic ciwb
energy consumption
fdi
gdp
two-way fixed effects regression
Economic theory. Demography
HB1-3840
spellingShingle ciwb
energy consumption
fdi
gdp
two-way fixed effects regression
Economic theory. Demography
HB1-3840
Nguyen Thuan
Dang Bac Hai
The impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)
description A key concern when constructing sustainable development policy is reducing the negative impact on environmental systems and maximizing human welfare. In this study, we assess how energy consumption effected on Carbon intensity of human well-being (CIWB). Using two-way fixed effects in panel regression, this relationship has been investigated during 2000-2018 for 9 lower middle-income countries including Algeria, Bangladesh, Egypt, India, Morocco, Pakistan, Philippines, Uzbekistan and Vietnam, while adding GDP and FDI per capita as control variables. The study reveals that the use of energy for economic development is ineffective and inconsistent with the overview of sustainable development due to the result of increasing CIWB. However, the sign of negative coefficients of GDP and FDI per capita in control variables have given the striking findings that these factors will be helpful for lower middle - income countries to pursue sustainable development by reducing CIWB.
format article
author Nguyen Thuan
Dang Bac Hai
author_facet Nguyen Thuan
Dang Bac Hai
author_sort Nguyen Thuan
title The impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)
title_short The impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)
title_full The impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)
title_fullStr The impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)
title_full_unstemmed The impact of energy consumption on Carbon Intensity of Human Well-Being (CIWB)
title_sort impact of energy consumption on carbon intensity of human well-being (ciwb)
publisher HO CHI MINH CITY OPEN UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF SCIENCE
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/04e18d857aee48e18dac5d3071db55d6
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