Environmental Impact Assessment Review | 2021

Revealing the pattern and evolution of global green development between different income groups: A global meta-frontier by-production technology approach

 
 

Abstract


Abstract A clear understanding of the overall pattern of global green development and the green development discrepancies among countries has a bearing on how each country participates in global environmental governance, which is more conducive to promoting the process of global green development in the future. This study constructed a global meta-frontier by-production technology model to evaluate the green total-factor productivity (GTFP), and studied the discrepancies of green development process and their growth sources for a sample of 163 countries (or regions) during the period 1990–2017. The results indicate that global GTFP witnessed remarkable growth before financial crisis occurred in 2007, but showed a slow growth trend after a decline during the financial crisis. The performance of GTFP exhibits significant regional disparity and dynamic change disparity. GTFP was the highest in high-income group, while lower than 0.55 in the upper middle-income and lower middle-income group in all years. Technological gap between regions was the principal factor leading to this result. Dynamically, among all countries covered in this study, there are twenty-five countries (or regions) experienced GTFP decline. Technological gap enlargement was the most important factor causing their GTFP decline, followed by the resource allocation inefficiency.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/J.EIAR.2021.106600
Language English
Journal Environmental Impact Assessment Review

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