Renewable energy consumption a panacea for Sustainable economic growth: panel causality analysis for African blocs
Özet
The issue of increased renewable energy consumption has been widely debated, and this has become
a central energy policy concern for developing and developed countries. The existing literature provides
evidence that there is a positive relationship between energy consumption and economic growth in
developed economies. However, findings in respect of developing/emerging economies remain inconclusive. Thus, this paper aims to investigate the impact on renewable energy consumption on economic
growth by controlling other macroeconomic variables for regions of Sub-Saharan Africa (East, Central and
West) covering the 1990–2018 sample period. For this purpose, common correlated effects mean group
estimator (CCEMG) and Dumitrescu-Hurlin Granger causality test approach are used to consider both
cross-sectional dependency and cross-country heterogeneity across countries. The CCEMG result indicates
that an increase in renewable energy consumption led to reduction in economic growth even when the
sample is analyzed based on geographical locations as East, West, and Central Africa. Granger causality
results validate the feedback hypothesis for only Central Africa; the growth hypothesis is supported for
East and West Africa. The empirical results suggest that energy planners, governments, and policy makers
must act together to increase the renewable energy consumption share in her energy mix to promote
economic growth for regions of Sub-Saharan Africa.
Cilt
19Sayı
8Bağlantı
https://hdl.handle.net/11363/5175Koleksiyonlar
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