Impact of technological progress on carbon emissions in different country income groups

Working paper 855

Authors

  • Chris Belmert Milinidi University of Pretoria Author
  • Roula Inglesi-Lotz University of Pretoria Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.71587/ayddec35

Keywords:

O30, O32, C23, Q56

Abstract

This study examines the complex relationship between carbon emissions and technological progress in a sample of 60 countries, divided into four categories based on their per capita income between the periods of 1989-2018. For robustness purposes and due to the broad definition of technology, we use six different proxies to represent technology; namely: Information and telecommunication technology (ICT); patents; public R&D expenditure; total factor of productivity (TFP); and a number of science and technology publications. After applying the fixed-effect method with Driscoll and Kraay standard errors, for the full sample, the results show that the ICT variables are a good instrument for carbon abatement, while R&D expenditure and patents do not have a clear impact on carbon emissions, TFP increases carbon emissions, and science and technology publications are negatively related to carbon emissions. The impact of the indicators on the various income levels groups of countries vary which has significant policy implications.

Published

2024-09-17

Issue

Section

Working Paper Series

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