The asymmetric effects of fiscal and monetary policy instruments on Pakistan’s environmental pollution
Citation
Ullah, S., Ozturk, I., & Sohail, S. (2020). The asymmetric effects of fiscal and monetary policy instruments on Pakistan’s environmental pollution. Environmental Science and Pollution Research,Abstract
Abstract
Maintaining a balance between environmental quality and economic growth is now one of the common goals of fiscal and
monetary policies in developed and developing economies. This study examines the asymmetric impacts of fiscal and monetary
policy instruments on environmental pollution in Pakistan over the period 1985–2019 by employing the asymmetric or nonlinear
autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) framework. The outcomes indicate that in Pakistan, a positive and negative shock in
fiscal policy instruments has a significant increasing influence on carbon emissions in the short run, while a positive and negative
shock in fiscal policy instruments has a significant decreasing impact on environmental pollution in long run. However, negative
and positive shock in monetary policy instruments enhances carbon emissions in short-run, whereas positive shock in monetary
policy instruments decreases carbon emissions in the long run. Therefore, the policymakers may consider the usage of fiscal and
monetary policy instruments to maintain economic growth along with lowering the environmental pollution.