Examining the roles of labour standards, economic complexity, and globalization in the biocapacity deficiency of the ASEAN countries

IF 6.5 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology Pub Date : 2023-02-13 DOI:10.1080/13504509.2023.2172475
A. Celik, A. Alola
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT With Singapore currently the world’s most natural capital (biocapacity) deficit alongside four other Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries having varying degree of ecological deficit, i.e. Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand, it then offers a clear justification for a more scrutiny of the ASEAN states’ ecological footprint dynamics. To provide more insight on the drivers of ecological footprint in the overall panel and for each of the above-mentioned countries, the roles of economic complexity, average working hours, labour productivity, labour income share, and globalization were examined by employing the Dynamic Ordinary Least Squares Mean Group (DOLSMG) alongside the recently developed (non)time-variant Granger causality approaches. For the overall panel, the DOLSMG approach established that labour productivity, labour income share, and globalization reduce the biocapacity deficit by improving ecological quality while economic complexity worsen the region’s environmental quality. Additionally, in the overall panel, there is Granger causality evidence from the average working hour, labour income share, labour productivity, globalization, and economic complexity to ecological footprint. Moreover, the results of the two Granger causality approaches are unanimous in evidence. For instance, average working hours per year is a significant causal of ecological footprint in all the sampled countries at varying periods. Specifically, there are Granger causalities: from labour productivity to ecological footprint in Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand; from globalization to ecological footprint in Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand; from economic complexity to ecological footprint in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand, all at varying times.
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考察劳动标准、经济复杂性和全球化在东盟国家生物承载力不足中的作用
新加坡目前是世界上最严重的自然资本(生物承载力)赤字,而其他四个东南亚国家联盟(东盟)国家也有不同程度的生态赤字,即印度尼西亚、马来西亚、菲律宾和泰国,这为进一步审视东盟国家的生态足迹动态提供了明确的理由。为了更深入地了解整体面板和上述每个国家的生态足迹驱动因素,通过采用动态普通最小二乘平均群(DOLSMG)和最近发展的(非)时变格兰杰因果关系方法,研究了经济复杂性、平均工作时间、劳动生产率、劳动收入份额和全球化的作用。对于整个小组来说,DOLSMG方法确定了劳动生产率、劳动收入份额和全球化通过改善生态质量来减少生物承载力赤字,而经济复杂性使该地区的环境质量恶化。此外,在整体面板中,平均工作时间、劳动收入份额、劳动生产率、全球化和经济复杂性与生态足迹之间存在格兰杰因果关系证据。此外,两种格兰杰因果关系方法的结果是一致的。例如,在所有取样国家的不同时期,每年平均工作时间是生态足迹的重要原因。具体来说,存在格兰杰因果关系:从马来西亚、菲律宾、新加坡和泰国的劳动生产率到生态足迹;从全球化到马来西亚、菲律宾、新加坡和泰国的生态足迹;从印尼、马来西亚、菲律宾、新加坡和泰国的经济复杂性到生态足迹,所有这些都发生在不同的时期。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.10
自引率
3.60%
发文量
58
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology is now over fifteen years old and has proved to be an exciting forum for understanding and advancing our knowledge and implementation of sustainable development. Sustainable development is now of primary importance as the key to future use and management of finite world resources. It recognises the need for development opportunities while maintaining a balance between these and the environment. As stated by the UN Bruntland Commission in 1987, sustainable development should "meet the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs."
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