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Global climate change due to increasing CO 2 emissions threatens the development and survival of many countries, especially those on the coast.Intentional government spending by sectors can lower CO 2 emissions to help these countries in sustainable development.Meanwhile, governance has some importance in enabling governments to achieve their economic development goals.Does governance affect the public spending -CO 2 emissions nexus in developing economies?The paper seeks answers by employing the system GMM Arellano-Bond estimators to assess the impact of public spending, governance/institutional quality, and their interaction on CO 2 emissions for a sample of 109 developing economies between 2002 and 2021.The results seem counter-intuitive that public spending reduces and governance increases CO 2 emissions, while their interaction lowers them.Furthermore, private investment and economic growth promote CO 2 emissions, while trade openness decreases them.The findings in this paper provide some policy lessons for governments of developing economies to protect environment.
Van Bon Nguyen (Fri,) studied this question.