Abstract

This study probes the environmental consequences of income inequality (INQ) in G7 economies from 1971 to 2015. INQ is captured by four indicators comprising GINI coefficients, Palma ratio, Theil index, and Atkinson index on per capita carbon emission as a proxy for environmental degradation using both fully modified OLS (FM-OLS) and dynamic OLS (D-OLS). The empirical data are subjected to pre-test using cross-sectional dependence (CSD) test and panel unit root and panel cointegration tests. The following results are established. First, the absence of CSD and presence of cointegration is confirmed. Second, positive effects of INQ indices are reported for the panel analyses. Third, the results of country-specific analyses are divergent and mixed among the G7 economies. For instance, positive impacts are reported for Canada, Japan, and the USA and negative for France and Germany; and insignificant impacts are evident in the case of Italy and the UK. Fourth, the effects of other covariates emerge from two directions entailing both positive and negative. While per capita GDP (LGDPPC) and trade openness (OPN) are aligned with the former a prior, per energy use (PEU) and inflation (INF) satisfied the latter. Consequently, embarking on pro-poor programs such as social welfare funds, private initiative support fund, and state intervention aimed at checkmating the excesses of the capitalists is seen as sacrosanct to solving the INQ-pco2 nexus disharmony.

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