Does it take international integration of natural resources to ascend the ladder of environmental quality in the newly industrialized countries?
Abstract
Among the new revelation in the natural resources-environment and climate change nexus literature is the
criticality of ascending the environmental sustainability ladders of the industrialized economies such as the
newly industrialized countries (NICs). This study considers the panel of top ten NICs (Brazil, China, India,
Mexico, Malaysia, Philippines, South Africa, Turkey, Indonesia, and Thailand) by utilizing the novel Method of
Moments Quantile Regression (MMQR) and other approaches including the Fully Modified Ordinary Least
Square (FM-OLS), Dynamic Ordinary Least Square (D-OLS), and the Fixed-effects Ordinary Least Square (FE-OLS)
to analyze the related dataset between 1990 and 2018. The combined empirical approaches help to measure the
countries’ drive for carbon neutrality. With a startling and unanimous evidence from the employed empirical
techniques, natural resource rent is detrimental to the global goal carbon neutrality in the examined panel
countries. However, there is a significant relieve that is brought about when globalization moderate the effect of
natural resource rent on carbon emission. Another favorable outlook from the study is that economic growth and
environmental nexus yields the affirmative validity of environmental Kuznets curve while renewable energy
utilization and globalization independently promotes environmental quality in the examined panel countries.
Therefore, the result from the study favours a more relaxed border to allow international integration of economic
and financial aspects especially for the natural resources-related and environmental-friendly goods and services.
Volume
76Collections
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