Revisiting the Relationship between Poverty and Environmental Sustainability in Sub-Saharan African Countries using Dynamic Econometric Models

Owusu Samuel Mensah

School of Business, Jinggangshan University, Qingyuan District, Ji'an City, Jiangxi Province, China.

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9931-1284

Chen Jianlin

School of Business, Jinggangshan University, Qingyuan District, Ji'an City, Jiangxi Province, China.

Fu Chuambo

School of Business, Jinggangshan University, Qingyuan District, Ji'an City, Jiangxi Province, China.

Hu Qio

School of Business, Jinggangshan University, Qingyuan District, Ji'an City, Jiangxi Province, China.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.20448/journal.502.2021.82.16.25

Keywords: Relationship, Environment, Sustainability, Dynamic ordinary least square regression, Poverty, Sub-Saharan Africa.


Abstract

Sustainable development remains an important issue in the quest to achieve a safe and a better world. The expansion of the 8 millennium development goals into the 17 sustainable development goals is a testament of the conscious desire to improve the human environment to ensure better quality of life for its citizens. This study assembles a collection of four sophisticated econometric models to determine the impact of poverty and other variables on two indicators of environmental sustainability. Beside, economic development, the study confirmed the negative impact of poverty on both indicators of sustainable development. The results prove that poverty in sub-Saharan Africa is a threat to environmental quality and its consequential challenges. The call to promote environmentally responsible behaviours should not be focused on developed countries alone. Poverty is also associated with high levels of pollution and poor countries including countries in sub-Saharan Africa contributes must equally restrategise for effective environmental goals. The study further discloses that poverty is one of the strongest factors that affect environmental sustainability. This observation is not a contradiction to the well-established fact that prosperity or economic growth is a major precursor of unsustainable environment. On the contrary the evidence in this paper amplifies a consequence of a social crisis if they fester at both ends. In one breath, whereas economic growth or economic prosperity can compromise the quality of the environment. In conclusion, this result implies that African countries in their pursuit of economic growth, education and effective healthcare to ameliorate poverty must incorporate other aggressive strategies to hasten poverty reduction.

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