4.7 Article

Financial inclusion and environmental sustainability in Ghana: application of the dynamic ARDL estimator

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 40, Pages 60885-60907

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-19994-2

Keywords

Financial inclusion; Foreign direct investments; Environmental sustainability; Dynamic ARDL estimator; Ghana

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This study fills the research gap on the relationship between financial inclusion and environmental sustainability in Ghana. The results indicate that financial inclusion worsens environmental sustainability through high carbon emissions, while foreign direct investments degrade the country's ecological quality. Additionally, trade openness, population growth, and energy consumption are detrimental to environmental sustainability.
Numerous explorations have been conducted on the determinants of Ghana's environmental quality. However, to the best of my knowledge, there has been no research on the connection between financial inclusion and environmental sustainability in the country. This study was therefore conducted to help fill that gap. In attaining the aforestated goal, econometric techniques that yield valid and reliable outcomes were engaged. From the results, all the series were first differenced stationary and cointegrated in the long run. The DARDL estimator with the support of the conventional ARDL estimator was adopted to explore the marginal effects of the predictors on the explained variable, and from the results, financial inclusion worsened environmental sustainability in the nation via high carbon emissions. Also, foreign direct investments degraded the country's ecological quality validating the pollution haven hypothesis. Finally, trade openness, population growth, and energy consumption were detrimental to environmental sustainability in the nation. On the causal directions amidst the series, unidirectional causalities from financial inclusion and trade openness to carbon effusions were disclosed. Also, feedback causalities between foreign direct investments and carbon emissions; between population growth and carbon effluents; and between energy consumption and carbon exudates were unfolded. The study recommended among others that, financial establishments should not fund the production of carbon-intensive goods, but those that are friendly to the environment. The government can also help to improve environmental sustainability by establishing regulations to mandate financial entities to engage in eco-friendly activities.

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