Does environmental quality respond (a)symmetrically to (in)formal economies? Evidence from Nigeria

IF 3.1 Q2 BUSINESS Society and Business Review Pub Date : 2023-04-27 DOI:10.1108/sbr-07-2022-0181
M. Arnaut, J. Dada, Akinwumi Sharimakin, Mamdouh Abdulaziz Saleh Al-Faryan
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Purpose Several studies have examined the effect of formal economy (usually proxy by economic growth) on environmental quality; however, the symmetric and asymmetric impact of the informal economy on environmental quality has not been examined in Nigeria. Therefore, this study aims to explore the short- and long-run (a)symmetric effect of formal and informal economies and financial development on Nigeria’s environmental quality between 1984 and 2017. Design/methodology/approach The study uses ecological footprint to measure environmental quality. An increase in ecological footprint suggests a fall in environmental quality. Informal economy is calculated as a percentage of GDP using the currency demand approach. Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL), nonlinear ARDL cointegration framework and vector error correction granger causality are used as estimation techniques. Findings The study’s outcomes establish the existence of asymmetric structure in the link between economic activities and the environment both in the short and long run. The asymmetric results reveal that positive and negative changes in the formal economy increase the ecological footprint in both periods. Hence, activities in the formal economy reduce environmental quality. On the other hand, positive and negative changes in the informal economy only positively influence the ecological footprint in the long run. In contrast, it negatively impacts the ecological footprint in the short run. This suggests that activities in the informal economy worsen the long-run environmental quality. Financial development has a positive influence on the ecological footprint, thus degrading the environmental quality. Furthermore, in the short run, a unidirectional relationship from the formal economy to the ecological footprint, while a bidirectional causality exists between informal and formal economies. Meanwhile, a unidirectional causality from the (in)formal economies and financial development to the ecological footprint was found in the long run. Practical implications The outcome of this study shows that both informal and formal economies contribute to ecological footprint; therefore, mainstreaming the informal economy into the formal economy will further increase the problem of environmental degradation and worsen environmental quality. Originality/value The study investigates the symmetric and asymmetric effect of formal and informal economies on environmental quality in Nigeria, which is largely missing in the empirical literature.
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环境质量是否(a)对称地响应(in)正规经济?来自尼日利亚的证据
目的几项研究考察了正规经济(通常代表经济增长)对环境质量的影响;然而,尼日利亚尚未研究非正规经济对环境质量的对称和不对称影响。因此,本研究旨在探讨1984年至2017年间正规经济和非正规经济以及金融发展对尼日利亚环境质量的短期和长期对称影响。设计/方法/方法该研究使用生态足迹来衡量环境质量。生态足迹的增加表明环境质量的下降。非正规经济使用货币需求法计算为GDP的百分比。使用自回归分布滞后(ARDL)、非线性ARDL协整框架和向量误差校正granger因果关系作为估计技术。研究结果表明,从短期和长期来看,经济活动与环境之间的联系存在不对称结构。非对称结果表明,在这两个时期,正规经济的积极和消极变化都会增加生态足迹。因此,正规经济活动会降低环境质量。另一方面,从长远来看,非正规经济的积极和消极变化只会对生态足迹产生积极影响。相比之下,它在短期内对生态足迹产生了负面影响。这表明,非正规经济活动会恶化长期环境质量。金融发展对生态足迹有积极影响,从而降低环境质量。此外,从短期来看,从正规经济到生态足迹存在单向关系,而非正规经济和正规经济之间存在双向因果关系。同时,从长期来看,从正规经济和金融发展到生态足迹存在单向因果关系。实际含义本研究的结果表明,非正规经济和正规经济都对生态足迹有贡献;因此,将非正规经济纳入正规经济将进一步加剧环境退化问题,恶化环境质量。原创性/价值该研究调查了尼日利亚正规和非正规经济对环境质量的对称和不对称影响,而这在实证文献中基本上是缺失的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
18.80%
发文量
35
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