4.6 Article

Industrial Structure Upgrading, Green Total Factor Productivity and Carbon Emissions

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su14021009

Keywords

industrial structure upgrade; green total factor productivity; carbon emissions; inverted V trend; negative spatial spillover effect

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [7210040759, 71804146]
  2. National Social Science Foundation of China [19BJY177]
  3. General Special Scientific Research Project of Shaanxi Department of Education [21JK0138]
  4. Scientific Research Support Programof Xi'anUniversity of Finance and Economics [21FCJH001]

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This paper discusses the relationships between industrial structure upgrading, green total factor productivity improvements, and carbon emission reduction, and empirically tests these relationships using provincial data from China. The study finds that industrial structure upgrading has a significant impact on carbon emissions, and upgrading industrial structures can reduce carbon emissions by improving green total factor productivity.
Carbon emission reduction is becoming a global issue. Methods of reducing carbon emissions in developing countries have become a hot topic of discussion. Based on the obvious structural transformation in developing countries, this paper discusses the logical mechanisms among industrial structure upgrading, green total factor productivity improvements, and carbon emission reduction. In addition, this paper empirically tests these relationships with provincial data from 2000 to 2017 in China. The conclusions are as follows: (1) industrial structure upgrades have a significant impact on carbon emissions. The industrial structure rationalization remains a noteworthy inhibition on carbon emissions. The industrial structure's advancement has obvious features of development at the current stage, and its effect on carbon emissions shows an inverted V trend, which is initially accelerating but then restraining. (2) Upgrades to industrial structures will decrease carbon emissions by raising green total factor productivity. (3) The rise of green total factor productivity in a certain region will have a relatively obvious inhibitory effect on carbon emissions, but it will exhibit a negative spatial spillover effect on the adjacent areas.

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