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Published Journal Articles

2024

Examining the Impact of External Debt, Natural Resources, Foreign Direct Investment, and Economic Growth on Ecological Sustainability in Brazil

2024-01
Sustainability (Issue : 16) (Volume : 3)
Although some recent papers have explored the impacts of external debt on environmental sustainability, the impacts of external debt on the load capacity factor (LCF) have been ignored. In this regard, this work aims to examine the influence of renewable energy, FDI, and external debt on the LCF in Brazil over the period 1970–2021; this indicator implies the country’s strength to promote the population based on current lifestyles. This paper uses the novel augmented autoregressive distributive lag (A-ARDL) technique. The findings from the A-ARDL show that renewable energy positively influenced ecological sustainability by promoting the LCF by 0.451% in the short run and 0.038% in the long run. In addition, the findings show that an increase in the rent of natural resources promotes the LCF. In contrast, the outcomes illustrate that an increase in the external debt led to an adverse impact on ecological sustainability by decreasing the level of LCF by 0.093% in the short run and 0.162% in the long run. Furthermore, the findings demonstrated that FDI negatively affects the ecological sustainability quality by reducing the LCF in the country. The study provides beneficial recommendations to policymakers in Brazil for achieving sustainable development in Brazil.
2022

ANALYSIS OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND THEIR IMPACT ON ECONOMIC GROWTH FOR THE PERIOD 1978-2013: CHINA AS A CASE STUDY

2022-12
The Seybold Report (Issue : 12) (Volume : 17)
The study's goal is to find out how international commerce affects China's financial development and economic growth. Examining the order of integration of variables with augmented Dickey-Fuller and Phillips-Perron (PP) tests and Johansen's co-integration methods to look at the long-term relationship between these variables. The Granger causality test determines if one variable causes the other. International commerce, financial development, and economic growth are all proven to be linked over the long term, according to the study's findings. The findings show that China's economy benefits from increased foreign commerce and financial development.

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