2020
DOI: 10.32479/ijeep.9415
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The Relationship Between Electricity Consumption, Foreign Direct Investment and Economic Growth: Case of Benin

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Cited by 17 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…These findings support the results of a study conducted by Bayar & Özel (2014), Cowan et al (2014), Rahman (2020), Shengfeng et al (2012), Thaker et al (2019), and Thapa-Parajuli et al (2021. The results of the study which also got the opposite result were carried out by Altunbas & Kapusuzoglu (2011), Atchike et al (2020), Bildirici (2012), Shengfeng et al (2012), andThaker et al (2019) found a unidirectional relationship from electricity consumption to economic growth. The results contradict this study conducted by Bah & Azam (2017), and Ibrahiem (2018) found no causal relationship between economic growth and electricity consumption.…”
Section: Taufiq Marwasupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…These findings support the results of a study conducted by Bayar & Özel (2014), Cowan et al (2014), Rahman (2020), Shengfeng et al (2012), Thaker et al (2019), and Thapa-Parajuli et al (2021. The results of the study which also got the opposite result were carried out by Altunbas & Kapusuzoglu (2011), Atchike et al (2020), Bildirici (2012), Shengfeng et al (2012), andThaker et al (2019) found a unidirectional relationship from electricity consumption to economic growth. The results contradict this study conducted by Bah & Azam (2017), and Ibrahiem (2018) found no causal relationship between economic growth and electricity consumption.…”
Section: Taufiq Marwasupporting
confidence: 85%
“…This study refers to several studies, such as the study conducted by Hirsh & Koomey (2015), explaining changing trends in the relationship between growth in economic activity and electricity use, and finds that these new trends require utility system stakeholders to rethink old assumptions and prepare to face the new reality of lower electricity consumption growth rates. The study conducted by Atchike et al (2020) investigated the relationship between electricity consumption, foreign direct investment, and economic growth and found evidence of a unidirectional causality of electricity consumption for economic development and foreign direct investment and a long-run relationship with an adjustable rate of 60.72 percent. The study by Bah & Azam (2017) explored the causal relationship between electricity consumption, economic growth, financial development, and CO2 emissions, and found that there is no causality between electricity consumption and economic growth.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Environmentalists and politicians want to create successful regulations that connect CO 2 emissions to economic growth (Ziabakhsh-Ganji & Kooi, 2012). The alliance intends to take the lead in discussions on current policy goals and other recent environmental problems, such as CO 2 reductions, resources use, and economic sustainability (Ohler & Fetters, 2014;Pao et al, 2011;Salim et al, 2014;Shaari et al, 2014). In this situation we should get the best options from the partnership between financial progress, economic development, energy, and CO 2 emission could also boost economic growth.…”
Section: Previous Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the production function takes a modified form that includes energy consumption and FDI. The additional inputs are factors of economic growth (Smile, 2009;Ibrahiem, 2015;Lin & Nelson, 2018;Pham et al, 2018;Zeng et al, 2020).…”
Section: -53mentioning
confidence: 99%