Environmental consequences of economic complexities in the EU amidst a booming tourism industry: Accounting for the role of brexit and other crisis events
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Date
2021Author
Adedoyin, Festus FataiAgboola, Phillips O.
Öztürk, İlhan
Bekun, Festus Victor
Agboola, Mary Oluwatoyin
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The European Union (EU) is one of the strongest, but most complex unions in the world with a
competitive tourism industry. The aim of this study, therefore, is to account for economic complexity
index (ECI), Brexit and other crisis episodes in the growth-energy-emissions nexus. Theoretically, the
traditional Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) model is assessed by adopting a One-step System
Generalized Method of Moment (Sys GMM) on data for 26 EU member states over the period from 1995
to 2018. For the first time, an EU-macro regional analysis is conducted with and without the UK.
Empirical results reveal that an increase in tourism, real GDP per capita, and energy use across the four
EU macro regions leads to increase in carbon emission. In some regions, it was observed that tourism,
ECI, Brexit, and the Greece bailout have no significant impact on carbon emission. This suggests that the
increase in international travel, complexity of the economy, and financial crisis do not accelerate environmental crisis in such regions. However, where such factors are statistically significant, Brexit and the
Greece bailout crisis both heighten emissions. Particularly, when the UK is excluded, Brexit and the
Greece bailout crisis increase and reduce emissions, respectively. The EKC hypothesis, however, holds in
either scenario. Based on these empirical findings, vital policy directions are suggested for a post-Brexit
EU-UK energy and environmental relations.
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