The academic relevance of environmental pollution and its relationship with the economic growth is an acclaimed research field. However, the implications of linking these variables with economic, climate and energy policies represent the new frontier of the debate. Among the popular theories regarding the nexus between environmental pollution and economic growth, the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) is highly debated. Additionally, the economic policy implications of uncertainty play a significant role. This work aims to investigate the existence of the EKC and the impact of some uncertainty indexes on it. The investigation includes analyzing both the direct impact of newly observed variables on pollution and the moderating effect of uncertainty indexes on the primary nexus. Specifically, three types of uncertainty are examined: economic policy, climate policy and energy-related policy. The findings reflect the persistence of the EKC and the relevance of the moderating effects, especially depending on the country’s categorization. This aspect, along with sample heterogeneity and factors such as the implementation of the Kyoto Protocol Agreement, is examined in the robustness section.
Exploring the impact of economic, climate, and energy policy uncertainty on the Environmental Kuznets Curve: International evidence
Cristian Barra;
2025
Abstract
The academic relevance of environmental pollution and its relationship with the economic growth is an acclaimed research field. However, the implications of linking these variables with economic, climate and energy policies represent the new frontier of the debate. Among the popular theories regarding the nexus between environmental pollution and economic growth, the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) is highly debated. Additionally, the economic policy implications of uncertainty play a significant role. This work aims to investigate the existence of the EKC and the impact of some uncertainty indexes on it. The investigation includes analyzing both the direct impact of newly observed variables on pollution and the moderating effect of uncertainty indexes on the primary nexus. Specifically, three types of uncertainty are examined: economic policy, climate policy and energy-related policy. The findings reflect the persistence of the EKC and the relevance of the moderating effects, especially depending on the country’s categorization. This aspect, along with sample heterogeneity and factors such as the implementation of the Kyoto Protocol Agreement, is examined in the robustness section.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.