Economic growth, environmental degradation and business cycles in Eswatini

This study investigates the impact of the business cycle on the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) for the Eswatini Kingdom over the period 1970 – 2014. To this end, we employ the nonlinear autoregressive distributive lag (NARDL) model to capture the long-run and short-run cointegration effects betwe...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBusiness and economic horizons Vol. 15; no. 3; pp. 490 - 498
Main Author Phiri, Andrew
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Prague Development Center 01.10.2019
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ISSN1804-5006
DOI10.15208/beh.2019.27

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Summary:This study investigates the impact of the business cycle on the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) for the Eswatini Kingdom over the period 1970 – 2014. To this end, we employ the nonlinear autoregressive distributive lag (NARDL) model to capture the long-run and short-run cointegration effects between economic activity and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions over different phases of the business cycle. Our findings reveal that economic activity only degrades the environment during upswing of the economic cycle whilst this relationship is insignificant during downswing of the cycle. We specifically compute a value of $3.57 worth of output been gained at the cost of a metric unit of emissions during economic expansionary phases. Altogether, these results insinuate much needed government intervention in the market for emissions via environmental tax reforms (ETR) which should be designed with countercyclical bias towards upswing the business cycle.
ISSN:1804-5006
DOI:10.15208/beh.2019.27