Energy Structure and Decoupling Dynamics in Emerging Economies: An Empirical Analysis of Green Growth Trajectories
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3126/Keywords:
Decoupling dynamics, energy structure, green growth, panel regression model, Tapio elasticityAbstract
This study uses panel regression analysis and the Tapio elasticity framework to evaluate green growth trajectories while investigating energy structure and decoupling dynamics in emerging economies. Elasticity trends from 2000 to 2024 show wildly disparate results: nations like China, Ethiopia, Rwanda, South Africa, and Uganda show strong decoupling, in line with the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC), while nations like Brazil, Niger, Mozambique, Vietnam, and India show negative decoupling, indicating a reliance on fossil fuels and lax regulation. In keeping with innovation theory, the random-effects GLS regression (overall R2=0.438R^2 = 0.438; Wald χ² = 98.15, p <.001) shows that ICT goods exports are a positive driver of adjusted net savings, while internet usage and CO2 emissions have negative effects, highlighting the focus on governance in institutional theory. Savings are significantly increased by GDP growth, which reflects transitional EKC dynamics. Overall, the results emphasize that guiding emerging countries toward sustainable decoupling and long-term green growth requires strong institutions, coherent policies, and innovation-driven transitions.
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