发展中经济体的能效投资:金融发展和债务状况的影响

Chukwunonso S. Ekesiobi, S. Ogwu, Joshua Chukwuma Onwe, Ogonna E. Ifebi, Precious Muhammed Emmanuel, K. N. Ashibogwu
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摘要

本研究结合了自回归分布滞后(ARDL)、完全修正的普通最小二乘法和典型协整回归分析方法,以估算能效政策建议的参数。分析使用的是 1990 年至 2020 年的二手数据。结果结果证实了能效、金融发展和总债务存量之间的长期联系。此外,对本研究关键变量的 ARDL 估计表明,金融发展在短期内促进了能源效率,但却阻碍了长期能源效率的提高。总债务存量在短期和长期内限制了尼日利亚的能源效率。研究局限性/意义本研究的局限性在于研究范围仅限于尼日利亚这个发展中经济体。支持能效项目的需求是全球性的,需要进行跨国分析。尽管本研究侧重于尼日利亚,但它提供了有用的见解,可以通过金融部门和债务管理来指导能效政策。政府必须保持可持续的债务状况,为促进能效的清洁能源项目的资本支出铺平道路。遏制这些后果的最廉价方法是提高能效,以减少灾难性影响。提高能源效率需要对节能技术进行投资,但对于发展中经济体(如尼日利亚)来说,在债务状况不佳的情况下,资金筹措仍然是一项挑战。因此,研究金融部门的发展和债务管理如何加快尼日利亚的节能投资就变得至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Energy efficiency investment in a developing economy: financial development and debt status implication
Purpose This study aims to assess financial development and debt status impact on energy efficiency in Nigeria as a developing economy. Design/methodology/approach This study combined the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL), fully modified ordinary least squares and canonical cointegration regression analytical methods to estimate the parameters for energy efficiency policy recommendations. Secondary data between 1990 and 2020 were used for the analysis. Findings The result confirms the long-run nexus between energy efficiency, financial development and total debt stock. Furthermore, the ARDL estimates for this study’s key variables show that financial development promotes energy efficiency in the short run but hinders long-run energy efficiency. Total debt stock limits energy efficiency in Nigeria in short- and long-run periods. Research limitations/implications The limitation of this study is that the scope is limited to Nigeria as a developing economy. The need to support energy efficiency projects is a global call requiring cross-country analysis. Despite this study’s focus on Nigeria, it provides useful insights that can guide energy efficiency policy through the financial sector and debt management. Practical implications The financial sector must ensure the availability of long-term credit facilities to clean energy investors. The government must maintain a sustainable debt profile to pave the way for capital expenditure on clean energy projects that promote energy efficiency. Originality/value The environmental consequences of energy intensity are being felt globally, with the developing countries most vulnerable. The cheapest way to curb these consequences is to promote energy efficiency to reduce the disastrous effect. Driving energy efficiency requires investment in energy-efficient technology but the challenge for developing economies, i.e. Nigeria’s funding, remains challenging amid a blotted debt profile. This becomes crucial to investigate how financial sector development and debt management can accelerate energy-efficient investments in Nigeria.
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