Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries

This paper empirically analyze the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth using data spanning the period 2009–2019 across 31 European countries (28 from the European Union, including the UK before Brexit, Iceland and Norway, which are candidates to join the EU, and Switzerland). The selec...

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Published in:Environmental Economics
Main Authors: Jules-Eric Tchapchet-Tchouto, Noukignon Koné, Loudi Njoya
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2022
Subjects:
OLS
eco
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.21511/ee.13(1).2022.01
https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/16582/EE_2022_01_Tchouto.pdf
https://doaj.org/article/b45cde2cf3e54597af2598a7c55eafb2
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:b45cde2cf3e54597af2598a7c55eafb2 2023-05-15T16:52:24+02:00 Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries Jules-Eric Tchapchet-Tchouto Noukignon Koné Loudi Njoya 2022-06-01 https://doi.org/10.21511/ee.13(1).2022.01 https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/16582/EE_2022_01_Tchouto.pdf https://doaj.org/article/b45cde2cf3e54597af2598a7c55eafb2 en eng LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" doi:10.21511/ee.13(1).2022.01 1998-6041 1998-605X https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/16582/EE_2022_01_Tchouto.pdf https://doaj.org/article/b45cde2cf3e54597af2598a7c55eafb2 undefined Environmental Economics, Vol 13, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2022) economic growth environmental tax policy European Countries (EU-28) European Environmental Agency Countries (EEA-32) OLS quantile analysis eco scipo Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2022 fttriple https://doi.org/10.21511/ee.13(1).2022.01 2023-01-22T17:53:20Z This paper empirically analyze the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth using data spanning the period 2009–2019 across 31 European countries (28 from the European Union, including the UK before Brexit, Iceland and Norway, which are candidates to join the EU, and Switzerland). The selected countries are also members of the European Environmental Agency countries (EEA-32). Baseline scenario with Pooled Ordinary Least Squares leads to the evidence that an increase of the environmental taxes in case of any tax policy reform will exacerbate economic growth. Robustness checks by introducing more control variables in response to omitted variables bias, coupling with GMM estimations that control for endogeneity concerns, consistently confirm the results. Deeping more with quantile analysis regression, a negative effect is confirmed in each quantile, and the results are significant at 1%. Nevertheless, there is a discrepancy between each quantile that allows highlighting evidence of countries’ threshold effects. In fact, low-income countries are more negatively affected than upper and medium-income countries. As the official communication of the EU Commission is always in demand of empirical research concerning the economic impacts of environmental policy instruments, the paper sheds light on the possibility of discussing and adapting the EU strategy based on a harmonization system. This evidence of differentiated effects among countries’ thresholds in the absence of any compensation may raise equity considerations within heterogeneous countries. Therefore, this paper fulfills the gaps in the inconclusive results in the existing literature. AcknowledgmentsAuthors would like to sincerely thank Ange Jusse Tchouto, Isaac Ketu, Arsene Mouongue Kelly for their invaluable support in this work, their helpful comments and suggestions on the previous draft of this paper. The usual disclaimer apply and views are the sole responsibility of the authors. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Unknown Norway Environmental Economics 13 1 1 15
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic economic growth
environmental tax policy
European Countries (EU-28)
European Environmental Agency Countries (EEA-32)
OLS
quantile analysis
eco
scipo
spellingShingle economic growth
environmental tax policy
European Countries (EU-28)
European Environmental Agency Countries (EEA-32)
OLS
quantile analysis
eco
scipo
Jules-Eric Tchapchet-Tchouto
Noukignon Koné
Loudi Njoya
Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries
topic_facet economic growth
environmental tax policy
European Countries (EU-28)
European Environmental Agency Countries (EEA-32)
OLS
quantile analysis
eco
scipo
description This paper empirically analyze the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth using data spanning the period 2009–2019 across 31 European countries (28 from the European Union, including the UK before Brexit, Iceland and Norway, which are candidates to join the EU, and Switzerland). The selected countries are also members of the European Environmental Agency countries (EEA-32). Baseline scenario with Pooled Ordinary Least Squares leads to the evidence that an increase of the environmental taxes in case of any tax policy reform will exacerbate economic growth. Robustness checks by introducing more control variables in response to omitted variables bias, coupling with GMM estimations that control for endogeneity concerns, consistently confirm the results. Deeping more with quantile analysis regression, a negative effect is confirmed in each quantile, and the results are significant at 1%. Nevertheless, there is a discrepancy between each quantile that allows highlighting evidence of countries’ threshold effects. In fact, low-income countries are more negatively affected than upper and medium-income countries. As the official communication of the EU Commission is always in demand of empirical research concerning the economic impacts of environmental policy instruments, the paper sheds light on the possibility of discussing and adapting the EU strategy based on a harmonization system. This evidence of differentiated effects among countries’ thresholds in the absence of any compensation may raise equity considerations within heterogeneous countries. Therefore, this paper fulfills the gaps in the inconclusive results in the existing literature. AcknowledgmentsAuthors would like to sincerely thank Ange Jusse Tchouto, Isaac Ketu, Arsene Mouongue Kelly for their invaluable support in this work, their helpful comments and suggestions on the previous draft of this paper. The usual disclaimer apply and views are the sole responsibility of the authors.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jules-Eric Tchapchet-Tchouto
Noukignon Koné
Loudi Njoya
author_facet Jules-Eric Tchapchet-Tchouto
Noukignon Koné
Loudi Njoya
author_sort Jules-Eric Tchapchet-Tchouto
title Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries
title_short Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries
title_full Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries
title_fullStr Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: Evidence from empirical analysis in European countries
title_sort investigating the effects of environmental taxes on economic growth: evidence from empirical analysis in european countries
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.21511/ee.13(1).2022.01
https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/16582/EE_2022_01_Tchouto.pdf
https://doaj.org/article/b45cde2cf3e54597af2598a7c55eafb2
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Environmental Economics, Vol 13, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2022)
op_relation doi:10.21511/ee.13(1).2022.01
1998-6041
1998-605X
https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/16582/EE_2022_01_Tchouto.pdf
https://doaj.org/article/b45cde2cf3e54597af2598a7c55eafb2
op_rights undefined
op_doi https://doi.org/10.21511/ee.13(1).2022.01
container_title Environmental Economics
container_volume 13
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
op_container_end_page 15
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