The impact of age structure on carbon emission in the Middle East: the panel autoregressive distributed lag approach
Erişim
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessTarih
2020Yazar
Öztürk, İlhanDehbidi, Navid Kargar
Tarazkar, Mohammad Hassan
Dehbidi, Navid Kargar
Almulali, Usama
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Tarazkar, M. H., Dehbidi, N. K., Ozturk, I., & Al-mulali, U. (2020). The impact of age structure on carbon emission in the middle east: The panel autoregressive distributed lag approach. Environmental Science and Pollution Research.Özet
Rapid evolution in the population age structure of the Middle East countries has major economic, social, and environmental
outcomes. Therefore, to fill the gap in the previous literatures, in this study, the effect of age structure on environmental
degradation was investigated in the Middle East region. To achieve this goal, a panel data of 10 Middle East countries were
examined over the period of 1990 to 2014. Moreover, the carbon dioxide emission per capita was used as an environmental
pollution index in this study. According to the stationary property of the variables, small sample size data, and the assumptions of
the model, the panel autoregressive distributed lag method of mean group, pooled mean group, and dynamic fixed effect
estimators were investigated in this study. The empirical results implied that the pooled mean group model emerged as the most
efficient among the three estimators. Also, results revealed that the age structure have a significant relationship with environmental pollution. Children and working age population have a positive elasticity, whereas elderly people have negative elasticity.
Furthermore, the results showed that the working age population has the greatest explanatory power on the carbon emissions.
Also, the relationship between per capita energy consumption and gross domestic product per capita with air pollution was
positive. Overall, the empirical results showed that any attempt to decrease carbon dioxide emissions in the Middle East region
should consider the population age structure.