Partner Article
New research reveals true impact of financial development on the environment
Financial development has significant indirect impacts on environmental pollution, new research from Trinity Business School confirms.
The researchers used province-level data in China over a 16-year period.
Conducted with China University of Geosciences and University of Sydney Business School, the research reveals that financial development has both positive and negative significant indirect effects on environmental pollution through various pathways, and the impacts are different in regions with low or high levels of financial development.
In the regions with poor financial development, insufficient financial development could indirectly result in environmental contamination.
In regions with relatively high levels of financial development, financial development has mixed effects on environmental pollution, i.e., improving environmental quality by promoting technological innovation and attracting foreign direct investment, but decreasing environmental quality by supporting secondary and tertiary industries.
According to Professor Brian Lucey; “Considering that other countries around the world have different stages of development, different levels of industrialization and financial development, on the basis of the threshold points identified in our paper, each country can formulate relevant policies to improve its environmental quality according to its actual development stage.”
The research suggests that local governments should consider the different characteristics of regional financial development when formulating environmental protection policies.
The research was published in the Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 151 (2021).
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Trinity Business School .
Improving North East transport will improve lives
Unlocking investment potential before year end
Give us certainty to deliver better homes
Hormuz: Safe passage - not insurance - the issue
Don't get caught out by employment law change
When literacy thrives, our businesses thrive too
Building a more diverse construction sector
The value of using data like a Premier League club
Raising the bar to boost North East growth
Navigating the messy middle of business growth
We must make it easier to hire young people
Why community-based care is key to NHS' future