The impact of financial development on carbon dioxide emissions: Evidence from CEECs
Vliv finančního rozvoje na emise oxidu uhličitého: Důkazy ze zemí střední a východní Evropy
diplomová práce (OBHÁJENO)
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Trvalý odkaz
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/176638Identifikátory
SIS: 228709
Kolekce
- Kvalifikační práce [18324]
Autor
Vedoucí práce
Oponent práce
Chondrogiannis, Ilias
Čech, František
Fakulta / součást
Fakulta sociálních věd
Obor
International Masters in Economy, State and Society with specialisation in Economy and Business
Katedra / ústav / klinika
Katedra ruských a východoevropských studií
Datum obhajoby
13. 9. 2022
Nakladatel
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních vědJazyk
Angličtina
Známka
Výborně
Klíčová slova (anglicky)
Financial Development, Carbon Dioxide Emissions, Economic Growth, Industrial Structure, Technology Innovation, Mediating Effect, GMM-SYSA sample of 13 CEE countries from 2000 to 2019 is used to investigate the total, direct, and indirect effects of financial development on carbon dioxide emissions. This study introduces four mediating effects of financial development on carbon dioxide emissions, i.e. economic growth, industrial structure, technology innovation, and the combined effect. To assess mediating effects and decompose total effect, GMM-SYS methods and bootstrap are employed. The empirical results entail that the total effect of financial development on CO2 emissions is inverted U-shaped. The mediating effects of economic growth, technology innovation, and the combined effect are enhancing mediating effects, with contributions to the total effect of 7.12%, 1.74%, and 3.29%, respectively. On the contrary, the mediating effect of industrial structure is a suppressing effect, with a 44.42% contribution rate. Therefore, industrial structure turns out to be the primary mediators through which financial development influences CO2 emissions in CEE countries. These findings give additional empirical evidence for the mediational model and Environment Kuznets Curve hypothesis from the perspective of financial development, and also provide new ideas for CEE policy makers to reach carbon neutrality objective by 2050.