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ID176705
Title ProperRenewable energy consumption and economic growth nexus
Other Title InformationEvidence from a threshold model
LanguageENG
AuthorChen, Chaoyi ;  Pinar, Mehmet ;  Stengos, Thanasis
Summary / Abstract (Note)The existing literature on renewable energy consumption and economic growth nexus produces mixed results as the effect of renewable energy consumption on economic growth can be either positive, negative or not significant. This paper examines the causal link between renewable energy use and economic growth by employing a threshold model using a 103-country sample in the 1995 to 2015 period. We find that the relationship between renewable energy consumption and economic growth depends on the amount of renewable energy used. Our results demonstrate that the effect of renewable energy consumption on economic growth is positive and significant if and only if developing countries or non-OECD countries surpass a certain threshold of renewable energy consumption. However, if developing countries use renewable energy below a given threshold level, the effect of renewable energy consumption on economic growth is negative. However, we also find that renewable energy consumption has no significant effect on economic growth in developed countries and a positive and significant effect on economic growth in OECD countries. The findings of this paper suggest that for developing countries to realize positive economic growth from their investment to renewable energy, they need to surpass a certain threshold of renewable energy consumption.
`In' analytical NoteEnergy Policy Vol.139; Apr 2020: p.111295
Journal SourceEnergy Policy 2020-04 139
Key WordsEconomic Growth ;  Panel Data ;  OECD Countries ;  Renewable Energy Consumption ;  Threshold ;  Non-linear Effects