Economic Growth, Financial Development and Carbon Emissions. Does Institutional Quality Matter?

Authors

  • Peter Kinuthia Department of Economics School of Business and Economics, Moi University, Kenya; Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resources Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences, As, Norway
  • Issac's Kemboi Department of Economics School of Business and Economics, Moi University, Kenya; Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resources Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences, As, Norway
  • James Onyango Department of Economics School of Business and Economics, Moi University, Kenya; Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resources Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences, As, Norway
  • Muyiwa Samuel Adaramola Department of Mechanical, Production and Energy Engineering School of Engineering, Moi University, Kenya

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58857/JFAE.2025.v02.i02.p01

Keywords:

Economic Growth, Financial Development, Institutional Quality, Carbon Emissions, Climate Change

Abstract

This study investigates the moderating role of institutional quality on the relationship between economic growth, financial development and carbon missions in Sub-Saharan Africa using a fixed effects panel regression model. The analysis reveals that economic growth and financial development have a positively and significantly relationship with carbon emissions, suggesting that these factors contribute to environmental degradation when sustainability measures are lacking. Conversely, institutional quality exhibit negative and significant effects on emissions, highlighting its potential in mitigating environmental harm. Importantly, interaction terms show that institutional quality moderates the positive effects of economic growth and financial development on carbon emissions, implying that strong institutions can reduce the environmental costs of development. These findings underscore the critical role of institutional quality in shaping the environmental outcomes of economic and financial progress. Policy recommendations include strengthening institutional frameworks, promoting green finance, and aligning economic growth with sustainable development goals to achieve low-carbon growth in the region.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Abbasi, K. R., & Riaz, K. (2016). CO₂ emissions, financial development, renewable and non-renewable energy consumption: An empirical analysis in Pakistan. Renewable Energy, 88, 577–585.

Acheampong, A. O. (2019). Modelling for insight: Does financial development improve environmental quality? Energy Economics, 83, 156–179.

Acheampong, A. O., Dzator, J., & Savage, D. A. (2021). The role of economic institutions in electricity consumption, economic growth, and CO2 emissions linkages: evidence from sub-Saharan Africa. In Environmental Sustainability and Economy (pp. 61-83). Elsevier.

Agent, A. (2021). EPA.

Alaganthiran, J. R., & Anaba, M. I. (2022). The effects of economic growth on carbon dioxide emissions in selected Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries. Heliyon, 8(11).

Alagidede, P., Adu, G., & Frimpong, P. B. (2016). The effect of climate change on economic growth: evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa. Environmental Economics and Policy Studies, 18, 417-436.

Alam, M. K., Biswas, W. K., & Bell, R. W. (2016). Greenhouse gas implications of novel and conventional rice production technologies in the Eastern-Gangetic plains. Journal of Cleaner Production, 112, 3977-3987.

Anchi, E. O., Aboubakary, N., & Edoh, O. M. (2023). Contribution of Agricultural Productivity to Industrialization in Africa: Does Infrastructural Development Matter?. Finance & Economics Review, 5(2), 14-35.

Andres, R. J., Gregg, J. S., Losey, L., Marland, G., & Boden, T. A. (2011). Monthly, global emissions of carbon dioxide from fossil fuel consumption. Tellus B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology, 63(3), 309-327.

Anwar, M. N., Iftikhar, M., Khush Bakhat, B., Sohail, N. F., Baqar, M., Yasir, A., & Nizami, A. S. (2019). Sources of carbon dioxide and environmental issues. Sustainable Agriculture Reviews 37: Carbon Sequestration Vol. 1 Introduction and Biochemical Methods, 13-36.

Aye, G. C., & Edoja, P. E. (2017). Effect of economic growth on CO₂ emissions in developing countries: Evidence from a dynamic panel threshold model. Cogent Economics & Finance, 5(1), 1379239.

Bakhsh, S., Yin, H., & Shabir, M. (2021). Foreign investment and CO2 emissions: do technological innovation and institutional quality matter? Evidence from system GMM approach. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 28(15), 19424-19438.

Baumol, W. J., & Oates, W. E. (1988). The theory of environmental policy. Cambridge university press.

Boden, T. A., Andres, R. J., & Marland, G. (2013). Global, regional, and national fossil-fuel CO2 emissions (1751-2010)(V. 2013). Environmental System Science Data Infrastructure for a Virtual Ecosystem (ESS-DIVE)(United States); Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC), Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States).

Carpenter, R. E., & Petersen, B. C. (2002). Capital market imperfections, high-tech investment, and new equity financing. The Economic Journal, 112(477), F54–F72.

Claessens, S., & Feijen, E. (2007). Financial sector development and the millennium development goals. World Bank Working Paper No. 89.

Cole, M. A. (2004). Trade, the pollution haven hypothesis and the environmental Kuznets curve: examining the linkages. Ecological economics, 48(1), 71-81.

Dasgupta, S., Laplante, B., Wang, H., & Wheeler, D. (2001). Confronting the environmental Kuznets curve. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 16(1), 147–168.

Eitan, A. (2021). Promoting renewable energy to cope with climate change—policy discourse in Israel. Sustainability, 13(6), 3170.

Espoir, D. K., Sunge, R., & Bannor, F. (2021). Economic growth and CO₂ emissions: Evidence from heterogeneous panel of African countries using bootstrap Granger causality.

Fávero, L. P., Souza, R. D. F., Belfiore, P., Luppe, M. R., & Severo, M. (2022). Global relationship between economic growth and CO2 emissions across time: a multilevel approach. International Journal of Global Warming, 26(1), 38-63.

Frankel, J. A., & Rose, A. K. (2002). An estimate of the effect of common currencies on trade and income. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 117(2), 437–466.

Ghazouani, T., & Maktouf, S. (2024, February). Impact of natural resources, trade openness, and economic growth on CO2 emissions in oil‐exporting countries: A panel autoregressive distributed lag analysis. In Natural resources forum (Vol. 48, No. 1, pp. 211-231). Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Grossman, G. M., & Krueger, A. B. (1995). Economic growth and the environment. The quarterly journal of economics, 110(2), 353-377.

Gu, D., Andreev, K., & Dupre, M. E. (2021). Major trends in population growth around the world. China CDC weekly, 3(28), 604.

Habiba, U., & Xinbang, C. (2022). The impact of financial development on CO2 emissions: new evidence from developed and emerging countries. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 29(21), 31453-31466.

Haldar, A., & Sethi, N. (2021). Effect of institutional quality and renewable energy consumption on CO2 emissions− an empirical investigation for developing countries. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 28(12), 15485-15503.

Hall, B. H., & Lerner, J. (2010). The financing of R&D and innovation. Handbook of the Economics of Innovation, 1, 609–639.

Islam, M. M., Khan, M. K., Tareque, M., Jehan, N., & Dagar, V. (2021). Impact of globalization, foreign direct investment, and energy consumption on CO2 emissions in Bangladesh: Does institutional quality matter?. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 28(35), 48851-48871.

Jahanger, A., Usman, M., & Ahmad, P. (2023). Investigating the effects of natural resources and institutional quality on CO2 emissions during globalization mode in developing countries. International Journal of Environmental Science and Technology, 20(9), 9663-9682.

Karim, S., Qamruzzaman, M., & Jahan, I. (2023). Nexus between government debt, globalization, FDI, renewable energy, and institutional quality in Bangladesh. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, 13(3), 443-456.

Kaufmann, D., Kraay, A., & Mastruzzi, M. (2009). Governance matters VIII. Policy research working paper, 4978, 2-6.

Khan, A. Q., Saleem, N., & Fatima, S. T. (2018). Financial development, income inequality, and CO2 emissions in Asian countries using STIRPAT model. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 25(7), 6308-6319.

Klassen, R. D., & McLaughlin, C. P. (1996). The impact of environmental management on firm performance. Management Science, 42(8), 1199–1214.

Kuznets, S. (1973). Modern economic growth: findings and reflections. The American economic review, 63(3), 247-258.

Langbein, L., & Knack, S. (2010). The worldwide governance indicators: six, one, or none?. The Journal of Development Studies, 46(2), 350-370.

Li, G., & Wei, W. (2021). Financial development, openness, innovation, carbon emissions, and economic growth in China. Energy Economics, 97, 105194.

Martínez-Zarzoso, I., & Maruotti, A. (2011). The impact of urbanization on CO2 emissions: evidence from developing countries. Ecological economics, 70(7), 1344-1353.

Minetti, R. (2011). Informed finance and technological conservatism: A theory of liquidity crises. Journal of Financial Economics, 99(3), 608–631.

Okara, A. (2023). Does foreign direct investment promote political stability? Evidence from developing economies. Economic Modelling, 123, 106249.

Onofrei, M., Vatamanu, A. F., & Cigu, E. (2022). The relationship between economic growth and CO2 emissions in EU countries: A cointegration analysis. Frontiers in Environmental Science, 10, 934885.

Paramati, S. R., Ummalla, M., & Apergis, N. (2017). The effect of foreign direct investment and stock market growth on clean energy use across a panel of emerging market economies. Energy Economics, 67, 242–253.

Pattayat, S. S. (2016). Examining the determinants of FDI inflows in India. Theoretical & Applied Economics, 23(2).

Rafique, M. Z., Li, Y., Larik, A. R., & Monaheng, M. P. (2020). The effects of FDI, technological innovation, and financial development on CO 2 emissions: Evidence from the BRICS countries. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 27, 23899-23913.

Rahaman, M. A., Hossain, M. A., & Chen, S. (2022). The impact of foreign direct investment, tourism, electricity consumption, and economic development on CO2 emissions in Bangladesh. Environmental science and pollution research, 29(25), 37344-37358.

Raheem, I. D., & Ogebe, J. O. (2017). CO2 emissions, urbanization and industrialization: Evidence from a direct and indirect heterogeneous panel analysis. Management of Environmental Quality: An International Journal, 28(6), 851-867.

Raihan, A., & Tuspekova, A. (2022). Dynamic impacts of economic growth, renewable energy use, urbanization, industrialization, tourism, agriculture, and forests on carbon emissions in Turkey. Carbon Research, 1(1), 20.

Rodrik, D., Subramanian, A., & Trebbi, F. (2004). Institutions rule: the primacy of institutions over geography and integration in economic development. Journal of economic growth, 9, 131-165.

Sadorsky, P. (2010). The impact of financial development on energy consumption in emerging economies. Energy Policy, 38(5), 2528–2535.

Serdeczny, O., Adams, S., Baarsch, F., Coumou, D., Robinson, A., Hare, W., ... & Reinhardt, J. (2017). Climate change impacts in Sub-Saharan Africa: from physical changes to their social repercussions. Regional Environmental Change, 17, 1585-1600.

Shahbaz, M., Van Hoang, T. H., Mahalik, M. K., & Roubaud, D. (2017). Energy consumption, financial development and economic growth in India: New evidence from a nonlinear and asymmetric analysis. Energy economics, 63, 199-212.

Shoaib, H. M., Rafique, M. Z., Nadeem, A. M., & Huang, S. (2020). Impact of financial development on CO 2 emissions: A comparative analysis of developing countries (D 8) and developed countries (G 8). Environmental science and pollution research, 27, 12461-12475.

Tamazian, A., & Rao, B. B. (2010). Do economic, financial and institutional developments matter for environmental degradation? Evidence from transitional economies. Energy economics, 32(1), 137-145

Tamazian, A., Chousa, J. P., & Vadlamannati, K. C. (2009). Does higher economic and financial development lead to environmental degradation: evidence from BRIC countries. Energy policy, 37(1), 246-253.

Thao, B. T. T., & Huy, C. T. (2024). Effects of economic growth, foreign direct investment, energy consumption, and urbanization on the ecological footprint in Vietnam. Tạp chí Nghiên cứu Tài chính-Marketing, 15(8), 15-31.

Trenberth, K. E. (2018). Climate change caused by human activities is happening and it already has major consequences. Journal of energy & natural resources law, 36(4), 463-481.

Wang, W. Z., Liu, L. C., Liao, H., & Wei, Y. M. (2021). Impacts of urbanization on carbon emissions: An empirical analysis from OECD countries. Energy policy, 151, 112171.

Xu, Z., Baloch, M. A., Danish, K., Meng, F., Zhang, J., & Mahmood, Z. (2018). Nexus between financial development and CO 2 emissions in Saudi Arabia: analyzing the role of globalization. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 25, 28378-28390.

Yuan, B., Li, C., Yin, H., & Zeng, M. (2022). Green innovation and China’s CO2 emissions–the moderating effect of institutional quality. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 65(5), 877-906.

Yuxiang, K., & Chen, Z. (2010). Financial development and environmental performance: Evidence from China. Energy Policy, 38(8), 4469–4477.

Zhang, Y. J. (2011). The impact of financial development on carbon emissions: An empirical analysis in China. Energy policy, 39(4), 2197-2203.

Zhao, B., & Yang, W. (2020). Does financial development influence CO2 emissions? A Chinese province-level study. Energy, 200, 117523.

Downloads

Published

2025-07-31

How to Cite

Kinuthia, P., Kemboi, I., Onyango, J., & Adaramola, M. S. (2025). Economic Growth, Financial Development and Carbon Emissions. Does Institutional Quality Matter?. The Journal of Financial, Accounting, and Economics, 2(2), 63–79. https://doi.org/10.58857/JFAE.2025.v02.i02.p01

Issue

Section

Articles