6,698 research outputs found
A review of innovative bond instruments for sustainable development in Asia
Purpose
Advancing the economies in Asia toward meeting sustainable development goals (SDGs) needs an unprecedented investment in people, processes and the planet. The participation of the private sector is necessary to bridge the financing gap to attain this objective. Engaging the private sector can contribute significantly to attaining the 2030 agenda for SD. However, the financial markets in Asian economies are yet to realize this potential. In this context, this paper aims to discuss the state of finance for SD in Asia and identifies innovative financial instruments for attracting private investments for SDs in these economies.
Design/methodology/approach
This study relies on published articles, reports and policy documents on financing mechanisms for SD. The literature review covered journal data sources, reports from global institutions such as the UN, World Bank, International Monetary Fund and think-tanks operating in the field of climate change policies. Though the topic was specific to financial market instruments, a broader search was conducted to understand the different sources of sustainable finance available, particularly in Asia.
Findings
The investments that are required for meeting the SDGs remain underfunded. Though interest in sustainability is growing in the Asian economies, the financial markets are yet to transition to tap the growing interest in sustainable investing among global investors. This paper concludes that to raise capital from private investors the Asian economies should ensure information availability, reduce distortions and unblock regulatory obstacles. It would also need designing policies and introducing blended financing instruments combining private and public funds.
Research limitations/implications
Though the study has grouped Asian economies, the financing strategy for SDGs should be developed at the country-level considering the domestic financial markets, local developmental stage, fiscal capacity and nationally determined contributions. Further research can focus on developing country-specific strategies for using innovative financial instruments.
Originality/value
Mobilizing funds for implementing the 2030 Agenda for SD is a major challenge for Asian economies. The paper is addressed to national policymakers in Asian economies for developing strategies to raise capital for SD through private participation. It provides opportunities for revisiting national approaches to sustainable finance in these economies
Emissions-foreign trade nexus: establishing the need to harmonize environment and economics in RCEP
Purpose
This article investigates the impact of foreign trade on carbon emissions of the member countries of the largest trade bloc, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).
Design/methodology/approach
The aggregate bilateral trade with members of RCEP during the period 1991–2020 was considered for analysis. The study also examines the impact of foreign trade (between member countries) on economic development, represented by GDP per capita. Dumitrescu–Hurlin panel Granger causality test was conducted to understand the impact of foreign trade on GDP per capita and carbon emissions.
Findings
Results indicate that though foreign trade is heterogeneously Granger causing GDP per capita, it also aggravates carbon emissions in RCEP bloc.
Originality/value
The study is of significance to the policymakers in the member countries as it provides evidence to include climate impact in trade agreements. The wealthier RCEP member countries can support the green transition of low-income countries through transfer of eco-friendly technologies
Investigating the foreign trade-emission nexus in RCEP
Foreign trade is usually considered a culprit for rising emissions. In this article, the authors attempt to understand whether the creation of the regional comprehensive economic partnership (RCEP) will lead to more emissions from the region. To meet this objective, the study analyses the relationship between foreign trade and carbon emissions of the 15 RCEP constituents, using macroeconomic data for the period 1991-2016. The long-term causal relationship between foreign trade and emissions was tested using the ARDL bounds test. The results indicate a long-run causal relationship between the two variables. A fully modified OLS regression model confirms that the three variables considered – foreign trade, economic growth, and energy consumption – have a significant, positive impact on emissions on RCEP member countries. The analysis of individual countries also confirms the cointegration between foreign trade and carbon emissions. ECMs further show the correction happens from foreign trade to carbon emissions
Bichromatically driven double well: parametric perspective of the strong-field control landscape reveals the influence of chaotic states
The aim of this work is to understand the influence of chaotic states in
control problems involving strong fields. Towards this end, we numerically
construct and study the strong field control landscape of a bichromatically
driven double well. A novel measure based on correlating the overlap
intensities between Floquet states and an initial phase space coherent state
with the parametric motion of the quasienergies is used to construct and
interpret the landscape features. "Walls" of no control, robust under
variations of the relative phase between the fields, are seen on the control
landscape and associated with multilevel interactions involving chaotic Floquet
states.Comment: 9 pages and 6 figures. Rewritten and expanded version of
arXiv:0707.4547 [nlin.CD]. Accepted for publication in J. Chem. Phys. (2008
Relationship between fixed capital formation and carbon emissions: Impact of trade liberalization in India
The liberalization of economies is aimed at boosting domestic growth through foreign investment and trade. The proponents of liberalization argue that opening up markets in developing economies provides access to capital to enhance production. However, proponents of the pollution haven hypothesis (PHH) argue that liberalization and trade agreements have led to the export of carbon-intensive production from wealthier countries to developing economies. The difference between the two outcomes lies in the nature of fixed assets built by developing countries. In this study, we examine the role of fixed capital formation on carbon emissions during two distinct periods of India’s economic development. India liberalized its economy with trade reforms in 1991, thereby providing two distinct time periods of closed and open trade policies. The economic data during 1971–2021 is divided into two parts—before (1971–1990) and after (1991–2021) liberalization. Gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) is used as a measure of capital formation while carbon emissions are used to represent environmental impact. Auto-regressive distributed lag (ARDL) model is used for analysis. Results indicate that GFCF had no significant relationship with carbon emission before liberalization, whereas, there was a significant, positive impact post-liberalization. The study is of significance to policymakers in developing countries as it suggests a change in the capital formation towards low carbon-intensive products and services. It also strengthens the argument for investing capital in cleaner energy and technologies
Local phase space control and interplay of classical and quantum effects in dissociation of a driven Morse oscillator
This work explores the possibility of controlling the dissociation of a
monochromatically driven one-dimensional Morse oscillator by recreating
barriers, in the form of invariant tori with irrational winding ratios, at
specific locations in the phase space. The control algorithm proposed by Huang
{\it et al.} (Phys. Rev. A {\bf 74}, 053408 (2006)) is used to obtain an
analytic expression for the control field. We show that the control term,
approximated as an additional weaker field, is efficient in recreating the
desired tori and suppresses the classical as well as the quantum dissociation.
However, in the case when the field frequency is tuned close to a two-photon
resonance the local barriers are not effective in suppressing the dissociation.
We establish that in the on-resonant case quantum dissociation primarily occurs
via resonance-assisted tunneling and controlling the quantum dynamics requires
a local perturbation of the specific nonlinear resonance in the underlying
phase space.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures (reduced quality), submitted to Phys. Rev.
A space-time channel estimator and single-user receiver for code-reuse DS-CDMA systems
Published versio
Can We Detect the Anisotropic Shapes of Quasar HII Regions During Reionization Through The Small-Scale Redshifted 21cm Power Spectrum?
Light travel time delays distort the apparent shapes of HII regions
surrounding bright quasars during early stages of cosmic reionization.
Individual HII regions may remain undetectable in forthcoming redshifted 21 cm
experiments. However, the systematic deformation along the line of sight may be
detectable statistically, either by stacking tomographic 21cm images of quasars
identified, for example, by JWST, or as small-scale anisotropy in the
three-dimensional 21cm power spectrum. Here we consider the detectability of
this effect. The anisotropy is largest when HII regions are large and expand
rapidly, and we find that if bright quasars contributed to the early stages of
reionization, then they can produce significant anisotropy, on scales
comparable to the typical sizes of HII regions of the bright quasars (approx.
30 Mpc and below). The effect therefore cannot be ignored when analyzing future
21cm power spectra on small scales. If 10 percent of the volume of the IGM at
redshift z=10 is ionized by quasars with typical ionizing luminosity of S= 5 x
10^{56} photons/second, the distortions can enhance by more than 10 percent the
21cm power spectrum in the radial (redshift) direction, relative to the
transverse directions. The level of this anisotropy exceeds that due to
redshift-space distortion, and has the opposite sign. We show that on-going
experiments such as MWA should be able to detect this effect. A detection would
reveal the presence of bright quasars, and shed light on the ionizing yield and
age of the ionizing sources, and the distribution and small-scale clumping of
neutral intergalactic gas in their vicinity.Comment: Version accepted by ApJ, with new fiducial model and improved
discussio
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