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The Extended Energy-Growth Nexus. Theory and Empirical Applications

  • Book

  • June 2019
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 4720886
The Extended Energy-Growth Nexus: Theory and Empirical Applications advances the established bivariate econometric relationship which inextricably links energy consumption to economic growth. The book extends this "nexus" to accommodate variables such as globalization, institutional variables, financial variables and the energy "mix." Rooted firmly in the modern literature, it covers empirical applications such as the evaluation of renewable energy incentives, the electricity generation mix, and sustainable development. Each application area incorporates modern econometric methodologies, including VAR, panel VAR, ARDL, panel ARDL, Asymmetric panel ARDL, and Panel Quantile Regression. Throughout chapters are accompanied by illustrative Stata and EViews code, demonstrating their uses in applied research.

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Table of Contents

1. Energy-growth nexus and economic development: a quantile regression for panel data
2. On the augmented energy-growth nexus: Electricity generation, waste, and CO2 emissions in Latin America and Caribbean countries: A panel ARDL approach
3. Income inequality, globalization, and economic growth: A panel VAR approach for Latin American countries
4. The impacts of China's effect and globalization on the augmented energy-nexus: evidence in four aggregated regions
5. The effect of fiscal and financial incentive policies for renewable energy on CO2 emissions: The case for the Latin American region
6. Energy-growth nexus, domestic credit and environmental sustainability: A panel causality analysis
7. The relationship between financial openness, renewable and non-renewable energy consumption, CO2 emissions, and economic growth in the Latin American countries: An approach with a PVAR model
8. The interactions between conventional and alternative energy sources in the transport sector: A panel of OECD countries
9. Daily management of the electricity generation mix in France and Germany

Authors

Jose Alberto Fuinhas Faculty of Economics, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal, and Centre for Business and Economics Research (CeBER), Coimbra, Portugal. Jos� Alberto Fuinhas, PhD (in Economics) is a professor of Applied Energy Economics, and Intermediate Econometrics at the Faculty of Economics, University of Coimbra (Portugal). He is a researcher in the areas of macroeconomics, energy economics, and environmental economics, at the CeBER - Centre for Business and Economics Research, sponsored by the Portuguese Foundation for the Development of Science and Technology. He has published in international journals, such as Energy, Economic Modelling; Energy Policy; Energy Economics; Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews; Applied Energy; Environmental Science and Policy; Environmental Resources and Economics, and Energy Sources Part B: Economics, Planning, and Policy. Ant�nio Cardoso Marques Professor of Microeconomics and Energy Economics, Management and Economics Department, University of Beira Interior, Portugal. Ant�nio Cardoso Marques, Ph.D. (in Economics) is Professor of Microeconomics and Energy Economics at the Management and Economics Department of the University of Beira Interior (Portugal).