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Featured researches published by Jianguo Du.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2017

Carbon dioxide emission and economic growth of China—the role of international trade

Kofi Baah Boamah; Jianguo Du; Isaac Asare Bediako; Angela Jacinta Boamah; Alhassan Alolo Akeji Abdul-Rasheed; Samuel Mensah Owusu

This study investigates the role of international trade in mitigating carbon dioxide emission as a nation economically advances. This study disaggregated the international trade into total exports and total imports. A multivariate model framework was estimated for the time series data for the period of 1970–2014. The quantile regression detected all the essential relationship, which hitherto, the traditional ordinary least squares could not capture. A cointegration relationship was confirmed using the Johansen cointegration model. The findings of the Granger causality revealed the presence of a uni-directional Granger causality running from energy consumption to economic growth; from import to economic growth; from imports to exports; and from urbanisation to economic growth, exports and imports. Our study established the presence of long-run relationships amongst carbon dioxide emission, economic growth, energy consumption, imports, exports and urbanisation. A bootstrap method was further utilised to reassess the evidence of the Granger causality, of which the results affirmed the Granger causality in the long run. This study confirmed a long-run N-shaped relationship between economic growth and carbon emission, under the estimated cubic environmental Kuznet curve framework, from the perspective of China. The recommendation therefore is that China as export leader should transform its trade growth mode by reducing the level of carbon dioxide emission and strengthening its international cooperation as it embraces more environmental protectionisms.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2018

A study on the causal effect of urban population growth and international trade on environmental pollution: evidence from China

Kofi Baah Boamah; Jianguo Du; Angela Jacinta Boamah; Kingsley Appiah

This study seeks to contribute to the recent literature by empirically investigating the causal effect of urban population growth and international trade on environmental pollution of China, for the period 1980–2014. The Johansen cointegration confirmed a long-run cointegration association among the utilised variables for the case of China. The direction of causality among the variables was, consequently, investigated using the recent bootstrapped Granger causality test. This bootstrapped Granger causality approach is preferred as it provides robust and accurate critical values for statistical inferences. The findings from the causality analysis revealed the existence of a bi-directional causality between import and urban population. The three most paramount variables that explain the environmental pollution in China, according to the impulse response function, are imports, urbanisation and energy consumption. Our study further established the presence of an N-shaped environmental Kuznets curve relationship between economic growth and environmental pollution of China. Hence, our study recommends that China should adhere to stricter environmental regulations in international trade, as well as enforce policies that promote energy efficiency in the urban residential and commercial sector, in the quest to mitigate environmental pollution issues as the economy advances.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2018

Causal relationship between agricultural production and carbon dioxide emissions in selected emerging economies

Kingsley Appiah; Jianguo Du; John Poku

Continuous threat posed by climate change caused by carbon dioxide emission has reignited global advocacy to confront its negative ramification with the greatest possible firmness. Global food security and agriculture face major challenges under climate change as a result of the potential negative effect of production and implementation of sectoral action to limit global warming. Overall, agricultural greenhouse emissions continue to rise and the analysis of superior data on emissions from farming, livestock, and fisheries can help countries identify opportunities to contemporaneously reduce emissions and address their food security. This study seeks to contribute to the recent literature by examining the causal relationship between agriculture production and carbon dioxide emissions in selected emerging economies for the period 1971 to 2013. The study, therefore, disaggregated agriculture production into crop production index and livestock production index to explicate the distinct and to find individual variable contribution to carbon dioxide emissions. By using FMOLS and DOLS, empirical results indicate that 1% increase in economic growth, crop production index, and livestock production index will cause a proportional increase in carbon dioxide emission by 17%, 28%, and 28% correspondingly, while 1% increase in energy consumption and population improves the environment of emerging economies. The direction of causality among the variables was, accordingly, examined using PMG estimator. Potentially, for emerging countries to achieve Sustainable Development Goal of ensuring zero hunger for their citizenry requires the need to alter their farming production techniques and also adopt agricultural technology method, which is more environmentally friendly.


Resources and Environment | 2017

Investigation of the Relationship between Economic Growth and Carbon Dioxide (CO 2 ) Emissions as Economic Structure Changes: Evidence from Ghana

Kingsley Appiah; Jianguo Du; Abdul-Aziz Ibn Musah; Samuel Afriyie


DEStech Transactions on Engineering and Technology Research | 2018

Anthropogenic Factors Impact on Ghana Using Stochastic Impacts by Regression on Population, Affluence and Technology and Cobb-Douglas Production Function

Kingsley Appiah; Jianguo Du; Kofi Baah Boamah; Samuel Afriyie


American Scientific Research Journal for Engineering, Technology, and Sciences | 2018

The Role of Marketing Capabilities as a Resource-Based View on Organizational Performance

Samuel Afriyie; Jianguo Du; Kingsley Appiah


Journal of environment and earth science | 2017

Non-Revenue Water Management in Ghana: The Opportunities and Challenges

Kingsley Appiah; Jianguo Du; Patrick Boateng Sarpong


Journal of Applied Science and Technology | 2017

The Causal interactions of Urban Population, and Economic Growth on the Environment of Ghana.

Kofi Baah Boamah; Jianguo Du; Patrick Sarpong Boateng; Isaac Asare Bediako; Claudia Nyarko Mensah


Journal of Applied Science and Technology | 2017

E-PROCUREMENT ADOPTION BARRIERS IN RETROSPECT: A STRUCTURAL EQUATION ANALYSIS OF GHANAIAN HOSPITALS

Patrick Boateng Sarpong; Jianguo Du; Henry Asante Antwi; Thomas Bilaliib Udimal; Abdul-Aziz Ibn Musah; Hira Salah-Ud-Din Khan


European Journal of Contemporary Research | 2017

CONCATENATING E-PROCUEMENT PROCESSES AND HEALTH SUPPLY SYSTEMS IN GHANA TO PROMOTE EFFICIENCY: A CRITICAL REVIEW

Patrick Boateng Sarpong; Jianguo Du; Kingsley Appiah; Thomas Bilaliib Udimal

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