To read this content please select one of the options below:

Financial development–ecological footprint nexus in Malaysia: the role of institutions

James Temitope Dada (Department of Economics, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria)
Adams Adeiza (Global Entrepreneurship Research and Innovation Center, Universiti Malaysia Kelantan, Pengkalan Chepa, Malaysia)
Noor Azizi Ismail (Faculty of Business and Entrepreneurship, Universiti Malaysia Kelantan,Pengkalan Chepa, Malaysia)
Marina Arnaut (Dubai Business School, University of Dubai, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)

Management of Environmental Quality

ISSN: 1477-7835

Article publication date: 18 February 2022

Issue publication date: 27 April 2022

486

Abstract

Purpose

Motivated by the conflicting evidence on the effect of financial development on environmental quality, this study investigates the moderating role of institutional quality in the link between financial development and environmental quality using a robust proxy in Malaysia from 1984 to 2017.

Design/methodology/approach

Ecological footprint is used to measure environmental quality, while financial development is proxied using three measures (domestic credit provided by the private sector, domestic credit provided by the financial sector and domestic credit provided by the banking sector). An index of institutional quality is generated from voice and accountability, government effectiveness, regulatory quality, rule of law and control of corruption. Autoregressive Distributed Lag Bounds Test, Fully Modified Ordinary Least Square and Canonical Cointegrating Regression were used as the estimation techniques.

Findings

The results show that financial development, institutional quality, economic growth and foreign direct investment improve environmental quality in the short run, whereas trade openness and natural resources worsen it. In the long run, financial development, institutional quality, economic growth, trade openness and natural resources deteriorate the environment. Furthermore, findings from the interactive term suggest that institutions and financial development complement each other to affect the environment in the short run. However, institutions and financial development perform a substitutability role in influencing the environment in the long run.

Practical implications

The outcome of this study suggests that there are time lags in the relationship between institutional quality, financial development and ecological footprint in Malaysia. Furthermore, the study offers important policy implications to policymakers in Malaysia and other developing countries on how to mitigate environmental degradation.

Originality/value

This study contributes to the body of knowledge on the moderating role of institutional quality in the relationship between financial development and ecological footprint in Malaysia. It examines the direct and indirect effects of financial development on environmental degradation through institutional quality, which have received less attention in the context of Malaysia. The findings from this study are robust to different proxies and estimation techniques.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank an anonymous reviewers for constructive comments and suggestions that helped improve this study. Any remaining errors are ours.

Citation

Dada, J.T., Adeiza, A., Ismail, N.A. and Arnaut, M. (2022), "Financial development–ecological footprint nexus in Malaysia: the role of institutions", Management of Environmental Quality, Vol. 33 No. 4, pp. 913-937. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEQ-10-2021-0251

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles