Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5048549 | Ecological Economics | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
We investigate the theoretically ambiguous link between income inequality and per capita carbon dioxide emissions using a panel data set that is substantially larger (in both regional and temporal coverage) than those used in the existing literature. Using an arguably superior group fixed effects estimator, we find that the relationship between income inequality and per capita emissions depends on the level of income. We show that for low and middle-income economies, higher income inequality is associated with lower carbon emissions while in upper middle-income and high-income economies, higher income inequality increases per capita emissions. The result is robust to the inclusion of plausible transmission variables.
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Authors
Nicole Grunewald, Stephan Klasen, Inmaculada MartÃnez-Zarzoso, Chris Muris,