Shock effect of COVID-19 infection on environmental quality and economic development in China: causal linkages (Health Economic Evaluation).

Environ Dev Sustain

Institute of Fundamental and Interdisciplinary Sciences, Beijing Union University, Beijing, 100101 China.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • COVID-19, which emerged in late 2019, has significantly impacted global health and economies, triggering volatility in stock markets worldwide.
  • Researchers analyzed the relationship between economic development (ED) and environmental quality (EQ) in China before and after the pandemic using a semi-parametric model, revealing notable changes in causality due to COVID-19.
  • Before the pandemic, causality flowed from ED to EQ, while after, a bidirectional relationship emerged, indicating that economic activity contributes to environmental issues, highlighting a potential opportunity for recovery while considering environmental impacts.

Article Abstract

Since coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was first reported on December 2019 in Wuhan, it fast spread to the rest of China, which has turned into a global public health problem later and generated global stock markets to violently shake. We inspect the causal relationships between economic development (ED) and environmental quality (EQ) during the period from January 2019 to May 2020 with the structural break for China and investigate the causal linkages between ED and EQ in subgroup of before and after the outbreak of COVID-19 with a semi-parametric model. The empirical tests show that smoothing structural transforms matter for the linkages of causality between ED and EQ, especially after COVID-19 infection. While the Toda-Yamamoto causality analysis supports unidirectional causality between ED and EQ before the outbreak of COVID-19, under structural shifts by the causality supplies of bidirectional casual linkages after the outbreak of COVID-19. Our results further clarified the proof that the economic activity gives rise to the environmental pollution and energy utilization mainly via the shock of COVID-19 in China. The emphasis on nonlinear causality between economic development and environmental quality may be an opportunity for China's economic recovery under considering the factor of COVID-19 infection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8441028PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10668-021-01814-1DOI Listing

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