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Dive into the research topics where Kofi Baah Boamah is active.

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Featured researches published by Kofi Baah Boamah.


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

The effect of innovation on CO2 emissions of OCED countries from 1990 to 2014

Claudia Nyarko Mensah; Xingle Long; Kofi Baah Boamah; Isaac Asare Bediako; Lamini Dauda; Muhammed Salman

Human activities are accelerating CO2 emissions all over the world most especially in high-income nations, spurring the rise in greenhouse gas emissions. For decades, technologies have been developed and patented in response to the environmental problems. There is an outcry for innovative ways to combat the environmental menace. This attests to the enormity of research being done, in recent years, to investigate how innovation can help mitigate CO2 emissions. This research aims at investigating into the effect of innovation on CO2 emissions in 28 OCED countries at an individual level for the recent period 1990 to 2014. The source of data for our utilized variables is the World Bank Indicators. Our study employed three key models based on the STIRPAT model, the economic-EKC growth model, and the innovation-EKC model. The findings of our study revealed that innovation plays a key role towards mitigation of CO2 emissions in most OECD countries. Its impact, however, varies across the countries, depending on some key factors and channels elucidated in this paper. Additionally, our study asserts that improvement in GDP per capita leads to the rise in CO2 in most OECD economies, although mitigate emissions in few OECDs; hence, the economic-EKC model is not valid for most economies. Non-renewable energy accelerates emissions whiles renewable energy sources mitigate emissions. Research and development (R&D) improves environmental quality and the EKC for both economic growth and innovation, valid for a few economies of the OECDs. We conclude that innovation is necessary in mitigating CO2 emissions; hence, governments and policy makers should invest and promote innovative renewable energy sources.


European Journal of Contemporary Research | 2018

URBAN WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS IMPROVEMENT THROUGH INNOVATION: ANALYSING MECHANISMS OF INSTITUTIONAL INNOVATION ADOPTION

Isaac Asare Bediako; Xicang Zhao; Kofi Baah Boamah; Ma Gao Qiang


Urban Water Journal | 2018

Exogenous pressures and probabilistic assessment of risk and vulnerability of urban water systems in Ghana

Isaac Asare Bediako; Xicang Zhao; Benjamin Chris Ampimah; Kofi Baah Boamah; Samuel Owusu Mensah


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


BRITISH JOURNAL OF INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH | 2018

EVALUATION OF THE USE OF E-PROCUREMENT SYSTEM ON PROCUREMENT PRACTICES AND PERFORMANCE OF PUBLIC HOSPITALS IN GHANA

Patrick Boateng Sarpong; Du Jianguo; Abdul-Aziz Ibn Musah; Kofi Baah Boamah


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

PERSPECTIVES OF INTER-ORGANIZATIONAL RELATIONSHIP GOVERNANCE MECHANISMS IN THE BUSINESS ECOSYSTEMS- A REVIEW.

Alhassan Alolo Akeji Abdul-Rasheed; Wen Yuan Li; Ibrahim Abdul-Fatawu; Kofi Baah Boamah; Isaac Asare Bediako


International journal of scientific research in science, engineering and technology | 2017

Complex Adaptive Systems and Technology Innovation Diffusion in Urban Water Management in Ghana: A Co Theoretical Analysis

Isaac Asare Bediako; Xicang Zhao; Henry Asante Antwi; Kofi Baah Boamah

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