This paper employs a number of panel methodological approaches to explore the link between per capita carbon dioxide emissions, per capita real income, renewable energy consumption and health expenditures for a panel of 42 sub-Saharan African countries, spanning the period 1995-2011. The empirical findings provide supportive of a long-run relationship among the variables. Granger causality reveals the presence of a short-run unidirectional causality running from real GDP to CO2 emissions, a bidirectional causality between renewable energy consumption and CO2 emissions, a unidirectional causality running from real GDP to renewable energy consumption, and a unidirectional causality running from real GDP to heath expenditure, while long-run es...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to examine the dynamic ca...
This paper examines the causal relationship between economic growth, combustible renewables and wast...
Undoubtedly, the increasing rates of CO2 emissions contribute highly to climate change. Studies stre...
This paper employs a number of panel methodological approaches to explore the link between per capit...
This paper employs a number of panel methodological approaches to explore the link between per capit...
This paper employs panel methodological approaches to explore the link between per capita carbon dio...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to investigate the dynami...
This study exclusively contributes to the health-environment discourse by using mortality rates, car...
This study exclusively contributes to the health-environment discourse by using mortality rates, car...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to investigate the dynami...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to examine the dynamic ca...
This study attempts to explore the causal relationship between renewable and non-renewable electrici...
This study complements existing literature by examining the nexus between energy consumption (EC), C...
This paper focuses on using time series data on real GDP, energy consumption, and CO2 emission to ex...
This study complements existing literature by examining the nexus between energy consumption (EC), C...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to examine the dynamic ca...
This paper examines the causal relationship between economic growth, combustible renewables and wast...
Undoubtedly, the increasing rates of CO2 emissions contribute highly to climate change. Studies stre...
This paper employs a number of panel methodological approaches to explore the link between per capit...
This paper employs a number of panel methodological approaches to explore the link between per capit...
This paper employs panel methodological approaches to explore the link between per capita carbon dio...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to investigate the dynami...
This study exclusively contributes to the health-environment discourse by using mortality rates, car...
This study exclusively contributes to the health-environment discourse by using mortality rates, car...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to investigate the dynami...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to examine the dynamic ca...
This study attempts to explore the causal relationship between renewable and non-renewable electrici...
This study complements existing literature by examining the nexus between energy consumption (EC), C...
This paper focuses on using time series data on real GDP, energy consumption, and CO2 emission to ex...
This study complements existing literature by examining the nexus between energy consumption (EC), C...
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to examine the dynamic ca...
This paper examines the causal relationship between economic growth, combustible renewables and wast...
Undoubtedly, the increasing rates of CO2 emissions contribute highly to climate change. Studies stre...