This study investigates the asymmetries in the nexus among carbon emissions, real output, and energy consumption between Malaysia and South Korea through the use of a non-linear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) model. The positive and negative shock of the variables indicate varying signs and magnitudes. Furthermore, the fndings revealed a mixed presence of asymmetries among the nexus, as indicated in the variables for both short and long runs. The study also exemplifed that the dependence of South Korea on energy consumption to generate economic growth appears to be greater than Malaysia. On the contrary, the impact of economic expansion upon the higher release of carbon emissions is greater for the case of Malaysia, in comparison to...
This article examines the short-run and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and ...
Understanding the causality between energy consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth is help...
Economic growth, energy prices, technological innovations, and financial depth all play a vital role...
This study investigates the asymmetries in the nexus among carbon emissions, real output, and energy...
The present research assesses the influence of globalization and technological innovation on CO2 emi...
This article examines the short-run and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and ...
Alarms over climate change have raised concerns that major economic variables are coupled with carbo...
This study mainly contributes to test the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis using panel d...
This article examines the short- and long-run causal relationship between energy consumptionand GDP ...
This research investigates the co-movement and causality relationships between greenhouse gas emissi...
This article examines the short-run and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and ...
This paper investigates the dynamic short-term and long-term relationships among per capita GDP, per...
This article examines the short- and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption a...
Understanding the causality between energy consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth is help...
This article examines the short- and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and GDP...
This article examines the short-run and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and ...
Understanding the causality between energy consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth is help...
Economic growth, energy prices, technological innovations, and financial depth all play a vital role...
This study investigates the asymmetries in the nexus among carbon emissions, real output, and energy...
The present research assesses the influence of globalization and technological innovation on CO2 emi...
This article examines the short-run and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and ...
Alarms over climate change have raised concerns that major economic variables are coupled with carbo...
This study mainly contributes to test the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis using panel d...
This article examines the short- and long-run causal relationship between energy consumptionand GDP ...
This research investigates the co-movement and causality relationships between greenhouse gas emissi...
This article examines the short-run and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and ...
This paper investigates the dynamic short-term and long-term relationships among per capita GDP, per...
This article examines the short- and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption a...
Understanding the causality between energy consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth is help...
This article examines the short- and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and GDP...
This article examines the short-run and long-run causal relationship between energy consumption and ...
Understanding the causality between energy consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth is help...
Economic growth, energy prices, technological innovations, and financial depth all play a vital role...