Clean energy development in the United States amidst augmented socioeconomic aspects and country-specific policies
Abstract
The drive toward the attainment of sustainable environment globally through clean energy development
or energy efficiency is not more desirable than in the 21st century, thus the existential policy moderations of economic, trade and security mechanisms. On this premise, and foremost in the literature, the
current study examined the country-specific (for the United States) and the driving impacts of economic
policy uncertainty, trade policy and national security on the development of cleaner energy sources by
using quarterly frequency time series data for period 1990:Q1-2018:Q2. By employing economic
expansion as additional factor, the study implemented the Autoregressive Distributed Lag Bounds Testing
approach to reveal interesting results: (1) there is a significant evidence that economic expansion,
economic policy uncertainty (EU), trade policy (TP), and national security (NS) exhibits long term
properties in common, (2) the increase in economic expansion and NS effectiveness significantly yields
more cleaner energy development, and (3) a more tightened TP and high EU are statistically significant
and detrimental to the development of clean energy. The Granger causality evidence substantiates the
role economic expansion, TP, EU and national security in renewable energy development. Generally, the
study posits cleaner and energy efficiency policy directive for policymakers in the United States and
other countries of interest from the framework of climate action and sustainable development.
Volume
169Collections
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