| Literature DB >> 21845167 |
Qiang Xiao1, Yang Gao, Dan Hu, Hong Tan, Tianxiang Wang.
Abstract
We have investigated the interactions between economic growth and industrial wastewater discharge from 1978 to 2007 in China's Hunan Province using co-integration theory and an error-correction model. Two main economic growth indicators and four representative industrial wastewater pollutants were selected to demonstrate the interaction mechanism. We found a long-term equilibrium relationship between economic growth and the discharge of industrial pollutants in wastewater between 1978 and 2007 in Hunan Province. The error-correction mechanism prevented the variable expansion for long-term relationship at quantity and scale, and the size of the error-correction parameters reflected short-term adjustments that deviate from the long-term equilibrium. When economic growth changes within a short term, the discharge of pollutants will constrain growth because the values of the parameters in the short-term equation are smaller than those in the long-term co-integrated regression equation, indicating that a remarkable long-term influence of economic growth on the discharge of industrial wastewater pollutants and that increasing pollutant discharge constrained economic growth. Economic growth is the main driving factor that affects the discharge of industrial wastewater pollutants in Hunan Province. On the other hand, the discharge constrains economic growth by producing external pressure on growth, although this feedback mechanism has a lag effect. Economic growth plays an important role in explaining the predicted decomposition of the variance in the discharge of industrial wastewater pollutants, but this discharge contributes less to predictions of the variations in economic growth.Entities:
Keywords: economic growth; error correction; industrial wastewater; vector auto-regression (VAR) model; vector error correction (VECM) model
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21845167 PMCID: PMC3155338 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph8072937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Results of the unit root tests.
| Variance | Test method | ADF test value | Critical value | Critical value | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ΔlnGDP | (C,T,0) | −3.1593 | −2.9762 | −3.6998 | stable |
| ΔlnCPI | (C,T,0) | −2.6692 | −2.6299 | −2.9810 | stable |
| ΔlnCOD | (C,T,0) | −6.0544 | −2.9763 | −3.6998 | stable |
| ΔlnNAD | (C,T,0) | −4.8663 | −2.9762 | −3.6998 | stable |
| ΔlnPPD | (C,T,0) | −6.4657 | −2.9762 | −3.6998 | stable |
| ΔlnHMD | (C,T,0) | −3.7614 | −2.9762 | −3.6998 | stable |
Notes: C: constant term; T: tendency; 0: lag order; Δ: first-order difference; GDP: per capita GDP; CPI: per capita CPI; COD: COD discharge; NAD: nitrogen-ammonia discharge; PPD: petroleum pollutant discharge; HMD: heavy metal discharge.
Results of the Johansen test for co-integration.
| No. of CEs | Trace statistic | Trace test
| Max-Egon | Max-Egon test
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5% critical value | Prob | 5% critical value | prob | |||
| None | 132.7742 | 95.7536 | 0.0000 | 55.5041 | 40.0776 | 0.0005 |
| At most 1 | 77.2701 | 69.8189 | 0.0113 | 35.5217 | 33.8769 | 0.0316 |
| At most 2 | 41.7484 | 47.8561 | 0.5934 | 24.1177 | 27.5843 | 0.1307 |
| At most 3 | 17.6306 | 29.7971 | 0.6736 | 11.4452 | 21.1316 | 0.6029 |
Normalized co-integration equations.
| GDP | CPI | COD | NAD | PPD | HMD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0000 | −1.0297 | 0.5513 | 0.7715 | 0.2110 | 0.2107 |
| 0.2010 | 0.4655 | 0.0128 | 0.4314 | 0.6138 |
Notes: GDP: per capita GDP; CPI: per capita CPI; COD: COD discharge; NAD: nitrogen-ammonia discharge; PPD: petroleum pollutant discharge; HMD: heavy metal discharge.
Figure 1Results of the VECM.
Notes: GDP: per capita GDP; CPI: per capita CPI; COD: COD discharge; NAD: nitrogen-ammonia discharge; PPD: petroleum pollutant discharge; HMD: heavy metal discharge.
Results of the Granger causality tests.
| Pollutant | Lag order | Short term | Long term | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H0: GDP does not Granger cause ED | H0: ED does not Granger cause GDP | H0: GDP does not Granger cause ED | H0: ED does not Granger cause GDP | ||
| COD | 4 | 4.596 (0.061) | 4.403 (0.828) | 6.894 (0.049) | 3.408 (0.433) |
| NAP | 5 | 2.891 (0.426) | 3.363 (0.848) | 4.369 (0.317) | 3.612 (0.249) |
| PPD | 3 | 4.635 (0.158) | 5.452 (0.719) | 3.312 (0.543) | 2.612 (0.342) |
| HMD | 3 | 5.159 (0.023) | 4.605 (0.256) | 5.894 (0.249) | 3.408 (0.437) |
Notes: ED (environmental discharge) represents the logarithm of the values of the four environmental pollution variables; GDP: per capita GDP; COD: COD discharge; NAD: nitrogen-ammonia discharge; PPD: petroleum pollutant discharge; HMD: heavy metal discharge.
Figure 2Impulse responses of GDP and CPI and of the four pollutant discharges.
Notes: GDP: per capita GDP; CPI: per capita CPI; COD: COD discharge; NAD: nitrogen-ammonia discharge; PPD: petroleum pollutant discharge; HMD: heavy metal discharge.
Figure 3The decomposition of variance for GDP.
Notes: GDP: per capita GDP; CPI: per capita CPI; COD: COD pollutant discharge; NAD: nitrogen-ammonia discharge; PPD: petroleum pollutant discharge; HMD: heavy metal discharge.
Figure 4The decomposition of variance for COD.
Notes: GDP: per capita GDP; CPI: per capita CPI; COD: COD pollutant discharge; NAD: nitrogen-ammonia discharge; PPD: petroleum pollutant discharge; HMD: heavy metal discharge.