Abstract

This paper examines the role of outward foreign direct investment on energy consumption and environmental quality in BRICS from 1990 to 2019. Most of the previous research considered foreign direct investment mainly focused on the environmental impact on the host country effect and ignored the home country effect. Therefore, the current study examines the home country effect of environmental pollution. We use various methodologies like cross-sectional dependence and the Pesaran-Yamagata slope homogeneity for the diagnostic test. After confirming the diagnosis test, we employ second-generation panel unit root tests, which confirms that all elements are stationary at first difference. The pooled mean group (PMG), Westerlund cointegration, two-step generalised method of moments (GMM), panel fully modified ordinary least square (FMOLS), and dynamic ordinary least square (DOLS) model have been used to determine the short-term and long-term association among the variables. The cointegration and PMG results confirm that the short-run and long-run association exists among the considered variables. The results reveal that developing countries produced environmental pollution at the early stage of development and checked in the long run. The study used the STIRPAT model to build an extended carbon dioxide emissions model by incorporating outward FDI, GDP per capita, and technology to achieve our objectives. The empirical results hold up the environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis, implying that outward FDI and energy consumption help expand greener technology to host countries’ environmental improvement in the long run and confirm that an inverted U-shaped linkage exists. Hence, the study suggests that developing countries should pay more attention to sustainable development and technological development that encourages more eco-friendly and environment-friendly technology.

Highlights

  • Under liberalisation, globalisation, and privatisation policies, energy utilisation and environmental pollution have continuously increased and are predicted to increase more in the coming future (Pandey et al 1999; Jun et al 2021)

  • The results reveal that the selected variables exhibit the presence of heterogeneity across the environmental pollution (ENV) outward FDI (OFDI) gross domestic product (GDP) energy consumption (EC) research and development (R&D) secondary industry (SI) labour force (LAB) GCF human capital (HC)

  • This paper investigates the effects of outward foreign direct investment (FDI) and energy utilisation on environmental pollution in BRICS from 1990 to 2019

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Summary

Introduction

Under liberalisation, globalisation, and privatisation policies, energy utilisation and environmental pollution have continuously increased and are predicted to increase more in the coming future (Pandey et al 1999; Jun et al 2021). This paper attempts to solve the problem by adopting basic and advanced techniques to identify the association between OFDI, energy consumption, and carbon emissions in developing countries like BRICS and provide proper policy and regulation to reduce environmental degradation. The past studies reported that FDI outflow from emerging countries like BRICS is quite impressive and has shown a significant growth in the last few years, which gives a positive picture towards economic development (Sachs 2003; WIR 2017). The primary focus of the study is to associate the link among outward FDI, energy consumption, innovation, economic growth, and pollution in emerging economics like BRICS. When manufacturing industries are in the take-off stage, it encourages eco-friendly technologies to control environmental destruction This stage increases the demand for a pollution-free environment, further encouraging more research and developmental activity and enhancing economic growth. A country needs to encourage green development by promoting eco-friendly technologies that eventually improve the environment and increase economic growth for proper development

Literature review
Findings
Conclusion and policy implications
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