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Articles

The causal relationship between coal consumption and economic growth in the BRICS countries: Evidence from panel-Granger causality tests

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Pages 138-146 | Published online: 17 Feb 2017
 

ABSTRACT

This paper empirically analyzes the causal linkages between coal consumption and economic growth in the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) using annual data from 1985 to 2009. Due to the common directions and principals of the BRICS countries with regard to energy, the employed panel causality methodology is chosen to account for both cross-section dependence and heterogeneity across countries. Empirical results provide evidence of no causal relationship between the two variables, suggesting that neither coal consumption nor economic growth is sensitive to each other. While this finding vindicates the neutrality hypothesis overall for the BRICS countries, the individual country results provide support for a unidirectional causality running from coal consumption to economic growth for China; the opposite is true for South Africa and bidirectional for India. Policies to reduce coal consumption will have a detrimental effect on India’s economy. However, in the rest of the countries, policy makers should aim to step further from fossil-fuel generation – and specifically coal – of energy without the potential risks of having an impact to the economic growth and development.

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