Affluence and emission tradeoffs: evidence from Indonesian households' carbon footprint

被引:12
|
作者
Irfany, Mohammad Iqbal [1 ,2 ]
Klasen, Stephan [3 ]
机构
[1] Georg August Univ Goettingen, Fac Econ Sci, Oeconomicum, Pl Gottinger Sieben 3, D-37073 Gottingen, Germany
[2] Bogor Agr Univ, Int Ctr Appl Finance & Econ InterCAFE, Bogor, Indonesia
[3] Georg August Univ Goettingen, Fac Econ Sci, Gottingen, Germany
关键词
ECONOMIC-GROWTH; ENERGY-REQUIREMENTS; KUZNETS CURVE; CONSUMPTION; AUSTRALIA;
D O I
10.1017/S1355770X17000262
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This study estimates Indonesian households' carbon emissions that are attributed to their expenditures in 2005 and 2009 to analyze the pattern, distribution and drivers of their carbon footprint. Employing an input-output-emission-expenditure framework, the authors find a significant difference in household carbon emissions between different affluence levels, regions and educational levels. They also find that, while many household characteristics influence emissions, total expenditure is by far the most important determinant of household emissions, both across households and over time. Consequently, emissions inequality is very similar to expenditure inequality across households. The decomposition analysis confirms that changes in emissions are predominantly due to rising expenditures between the two periods, while expenditure elasticities analysis suggests that the rise in household emissions is mainly caused by the overall rise in total household expenditure, and not by shifting consumption shares among consumption categories. The paper discusses policy options for Indonesia to reduce this very strong expenditure-emissions link.
引用
收藏
页码:546 / 570
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Unbiasing the estimate of the role of income in carbon footprint of households: Analysis of the Spanish case as a pilot study
    de Arce, Rafael
    Mahia, Ramon
    HELIYON, 2023, 9 (06)
  • [32] How technological innovation influences carbon emission efficiency for sustainable development? Evidence from China
    Zhao, Xiaochun
    Long, Laichun
    Yin, Shi
    Zhou, Ying
    RESOURCES ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 14
  • [33] Financial development for energy access: Evidence from credit rationing and carbon emission in MENA region
    Ali, Wajid
    Dash, Devi Prasad
    Dagar, Vishal
    Kagzi, Muneza
    Elmawazini, Khaled
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, 2025, 103
  • [34] Can digitalization facilitate low carbon lifestyle? --Evidence from households' embedded emissions in China
    Li, Jiajia
    Li, Jun
    Zhang, Jian
    TECHNOLOGY IN SOCIETY, 2024, 76
  • [35] EKC and carbon footprint of cross-border waste transfer: Evidence from 134 countries
    Liu, Yi
    Lai, Xiaojin
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2021, 129
  • [36] Scaling down the "Netherlands Fallacy": a local-level quantitative study of the effect of affluence on the carbon footprint across the United States
    Clement, Matthew Thomas
    Pattison, Andrew
    Habans, Robby
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY, 2017, 78 : 1 - 8
  • [37] Impacts of industrial structure and technical progress on carbon emission intensity: Evidence from 281 cities in China
    Zhang, Fan
    Deng, Xiangzheng
    Phillips, Fred
    Fang, Chuanglin
    Wang, Chao
    TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE, 2020, 154
  • [38] Does renewable energy reduce per capita carbon emissions and per capita ecological footprint? New evidence from 130 countries
    Li, Rongrong
    Wang, Qiang
    Li, Lejia
    ENERGY STRATEGY REVIEWS, 2023, 49
  • [39] Spatiotemporal evolution of carbon emission intensity and the driving effect of green technology innovation: Evidence from China
    Zhao, Hongxiao
    Cheng, Yu
    Liu, Yan
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2023, 30 (46) : 103087 - 103100
  • [40] Reexamining the impact of natural resource rent and corruption control on environmental quality: Evidence from carbon emissions and ecological footprint in 152 countries
    Li, Rongrong
    Hu, Sailan
    Wang, Qiang
    NATURAL RESOURCES FORUM, 2024, 48 (02) : 636 - 660