Although mobile money has been hailed as a serious innovation in the pursuit of financial inclusion and poverty reduction ; however, its impact on the environment and energy transition is not yet fully understood. This study takes this thorny path by analysing the impact of mobile money adoption on greenhouse gas and CO2 emissions in 41 African countries over the period 2002-2020. Using the entropy balancing method, I find that the adoption of mobile money contributed to an increase in emissions of 0.41 and 0.51 percentage points of greenhouse gases and CO2, respectively in African countries. After checking the robustness of these results, I show that the main drivers of the destabilizing and amplifying effect of mobile money on the environ...
International audienceThis paper investigates the impact of financial innovations (mobile money) on ...
Climate change mitigation is a topical issue with growing debate in the context of the renewable ene...
This study examines how increasing ICT penetration in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) can contribute toward...
Although mobile money has been hailed as a serious innovation in the pursuit of financial inclusion ...
This study investigates how the mobile phone can complement knowledge diffusion in order to influenc...
Research suggests that information and communication technologies (ICTs) have a nonlinear relationsh...
African countries are in a unique position to reap the socio-economic and environmental benefits of ...
Relationships among energy consumption, environmental issues and other macroeconomic variables prov...
The use of mobile phones is a global phenomenon that provides developing countries with novel opport...
International audienceBased on a sample of 76 developing countries over 1990-2019, we assess the eff...
The emergence of cloud banking in developing economies from billions of cell phones transacting both...
The global environment faces the issue of sustainability arising from the persistent growth rates in...
In sub-Saharan Africa, financial inclusion remains low, with households being more vulnerable to idi...
It has become increasingly important for companies in the twenty-first century to consider environme...
Mobile money is “a technology that allows people to transfer funds between banks or accounts, deposi...
International audienceThis paper investigates the impact of financial innovations (mobile money) on ...
Climate change mitigation is a topical issue with growing debate in the context of the renewable ene...
This study examines how increasing ICT penetration in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) can contribute toward...
Although mobile money has been hailed as a serious innovation in the pursuit of financial inclusion ...
This study investigates how the mobile phone can complement knowledge diffusion in order to influenc...
Research suggests that information and communication technologies (ICTs) have a nonlinear relationsh...
African countries are in a unique position to reap the socio-economic and environmental benefits of ...
Relationships among energy consumption, environmental issues and other macroeconomic variables prov...
The use of mobile phones is a global phenomenon that provides developing countries with novel opport...
International audienceBased on a sample of 76 developing countries over 1990-2019, we assess the eff...
The emergence of cloud banking in developing economies from billions of cell phones transacting both...
The global environment faces the issue of sustainability arising from the persistent growth rates in...
In sub-Saharan Africa, financial inclusion remains low, with households being more vulnerable to idi...
It has become increasingly important for companies in the twenty-first century to consider environme...
Mobile money is “a technology that allows people to transfer funds between banks or accounts, deposi...
International audienceThis paper investigates the impact of financial innovations (mobile money) on ...
Climate change mitigation is a topical issue with growing debate in the context of the renewable ene...
This study examines how increasing ICT penetration in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) can contribute toward...