Linking economic globalization, economic growth, financial development, and ecological footprint: Evidence from symmetric and asymmetric ARDL

•Unlike previous literature, both symmetric and asymmetric ARDL are applied.•A positive change in economic globalization reduces footprint.•A negative change in economic globalization also mitigates footprint.•The results of asymmetric ARDL are entirely different from the symmetric ARDL.•Financial d...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ecological indicators Vol. 121; p. 107060
Main Authors: Ahmed, Zahoor, Zhang, Bin, Cary, Michael
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 01-02-2021
Elsevier
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•Unlike previous literature, both symmetric and asymmetric ARDL are applied.•A positive change in economic globalization reduces footprint.•A negative change in economic globalization also mitigates footprint.•The results of asymmetric ARDL are entirely different from the symmetric ARDL.•Financial development increases footprint in both methods. Over the past few years, a growing number of scholars employed ecological footprint (EP) as a proxy of environmental deterioration because this comprehensive indicator effectively captures environmental degradation. However, the literature on driving factors of the ecological footprint indicates diverse findings, and the majority of the studies explore symmetric relationships. Taking this in view, the current study uses both symmetric and asymmetric methods to examine the nexus between ecological footprint, economic globalization, economic growth, and financial development, controlling for population density and energy consumption in the third-largest economy Japan. The study uses advanced unit root methods including the Narayan-Popp and CMR unit root tests with two breaks to determine unit root properties. The asymmetric and symmetric ARDL methods are used to probe cointegration and long-run associations. The findings reveal the long-run asymmetric and symmetric relationship of variables with the ecological footprint. The long-run empirical results of symmetric ARDL suggest that economic globalization and financial development increase footprint in Japan. On the flipside, the novel findings from the asymmetric ARDL indicate that positive and negative changes in economic globalization reduce footprint. Interestingly, the asymmetric ARDL presents a totally different picture, indicating that the results of symmetric ARDL can be unreliable in the presence of asymmetries. A positive change in financial development increases footprint with a more pronounced effect in the long-run, compared to a negative change which has a comparatively weak effect. Energy consumption deteriorates the environment by increasing the ecological footprint. On the positive side, population density decreases footprint, and the inverted U-shaped relationship between footprint and income confirms the validity of the EKC in Japan. Finally, the policy implications of these novel findings are discussed.
ISSN:1470-160X
1872-7034
DOI:10.1016/j.ecolind.2020.107060