Publication | Open Access
The Impact of Foreign Direct Investments and Economic Growth on Environmental Degradation: The Case of the Balkans
31
Citations
54
References
2021
Year
EngineeringInternational EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentEconomic AssessmentEnvironmental Impact AssessmentInternational InvestmentSustainable DevelopmentApplied EconometricsEnvironmental EconomicsEconomic GrowthPearson CorrelationEkc HypothesisEconomic Policy AnalysisEnvironmental Economic GeographyEconomic AnalysisEconomic SustainabilityEconomic Impact AnalysisEconomicsForeign Direct InvestmentsPolynomial Linear RegressionNational EconomiesBusinessEconometricsDegrowthEconomic Environment
The aspiration of this study was to examine the impact of foreign direct investments (FDI) and economic growth on environmental degradation in the Balkans for the period 1998–2019. Balkan countries were classified into two groups, high income countries (HIC) and upper-middle income countries (UMIC). Thus, two hypotheses have been set. The effect of FDI on environmental degradation was observed through pollution haven hypothesis (PHH). To examine that connection, we used Pearson correlation for all countries, HIC and UMIC. Furthermore, the impact of economic growth on environmental degradation was tested through the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) hypothesis. For that purpose, polynomial linear regression was applied. In order to examine the dependence of environmental degradation in relation to all predictors in the model, a multivariate linear regression was used. PHH was confirmed in Serbia, Albania, Croatia, Romania, and Bulgaria, the Balkans as a whole, and HIC, and the EKC hypothesis was rejected. This paper represents a contribution to a very scarce number of studies regarding the impact of FDI and economic growth on the environment in the Balkans, as a whole. The results of this study can be useful to policy makers in the terms of inducting stricter environmental rules.
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