This paper examines how financial development shapes total factor energy efficiency (TFEE) across the European Union (EU-27) and Western Balkans (WB-6) via a two-stage methodology. We develop DEA-based TFEE indicators from 2006 to 2021 via a window approach that reflects short- and medium-term changes. The production technique integrates primary energy, capital, and labor as inputs, with GDP as a desirable outcome and CO2 emissions as an undesirable output. In the second stage, we estimate a fixed-effects Tobit model that associates latent TFEE scores with standard and composite indices of financial and economic development, while accounting for unobserved country heterogeneity, common temporal shocks, and non-linearities in gross domestic product per capita. While similar Tobit frameworks have been implemented for EU-27, this represents the first case, to our knowledge, of estimating such a model for six Western Balkan countries within a unified EU–WB context. This extension is both methodological and substantive as it integrates the Western Balkans into the finance–energy efficiency discourse and offers policy-relevant evidence regarding the effectiveness of current financial architectures in the region in facilitating the transition mandated by the European Green Deal and the Green Agenda for the Western Balkans.
Shahini et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: