Innovation and Carbon Emissions: A Southeast Asian Perspective DOI
Irsan Hardi, Mustafa Necati ÇOBAN,

Michael Provide Fumey

и другие.

Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics, Год журнала: 2025, Номер 3(1), С. 15 - 32

Опубликована: Апрель 4, 2025

In an era where sustainable development is paramount, understanding the relationship between innovation and environmental impact has become increasingly critical. As Southeast Asian (SEA) economies strive to transition toward more knowledge-based technology-driven growth, it crucial assess whether fosters sustainability or exacerbates degradation. This study examines of ecosystem on CO2 emissions in selected SEA countries, utilizing various metrics from Global Innovation Index (GII) grouped into five categories: institutions, human capital research, infrastructure, market sophistication, creative outputs. By employing Generalized Linear Models (GLMs) conducting robustness checks with Robust Least Squares (RLS), reveals that all GII categories significantly emissions. However, findings indicate this positive, meaning landscape continues contribute rising The country-specific analysis also confirms most are still not environmentally friendly. evidence underscores need for policymakers countries prioritize frameworks promote adoption inclusive green technologies practices mitigate adverse effects

Язык: Английский

Innovation and Carbon Emissions: A Southeast Asian Perspective DOI
Irsan Hardi, Mustafa Necati ÇOBAN,

Michael Provide Fumey

и другие.

Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics, Год журнала: 2025, Номер 3(1), С. 15 - 32

Опубликована: Апрель 4, 2025

In an era where sustainable development is paramount, understanding the relationship between innovation and environmental impact has become increasingly critical. As Southeast Asian (SEA) economies strive to transition toward more knowledge-based technology-driven growth, it crucial assess whether fosters sustainability or exacerbates degradation. This study examines of ecosystem on CO2 emissions in selected SEA countries, utilizing various metrics from Global Innovation Index (GII) grouped into five categories: institutions, human capital research, infrastructure, market sophistication, creative outputs. By employing Generalized Linear Models (GLMs) conducting robustness checks with Robust Least Squares (RLS), reveals that all GII categories significantly emissions. However, findings indicate this positive, meaning landscape continues contribute rising The country-specific analysis also confirms most are still not environmentally friendly. evidence underscores need for policymakers countries prioritize frameworks promote adoption inclusive green technologies practices mitigate adverse effects

Язык: Английский

Процитировано

0