The determinants of solid waste generation in the OECD: Evidence from cross-elasticity changes in a common correlated effects framework

Avik Sinha, Nicolas Schneider, Malin Song*, Umer Shahzad

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Following the COP26 summit, the management of solid waste has been identified as a major policy issue that can only be tackled if nations reorient their innovational endeavors. However, the present academic and policy discourse cannot provide a consensus on how to address this issue at the policy level. The absence of a comprehensive policy framework for achieving this reorientation and addressing the issue has motivated the present study. This paper conducts a comparative investigation of the long-run determinants of municipal solid waste (MSW) generation for the 10 best and least recycling economies in the OECD. We consider a set of technological, regulatory, and institutional regressors such as eco-innovation, environmental tax revenue, governance quality, an index of the structural transformation of the economy, and the capital-to-labor ratio. Based on data with the highest availability and spanning the longest time period (2000–2018), our study adopts a common correlated effects framework accounting for heterogeneity and cross-sectional dependence within the sample. Results of individual impacts show that eco-innovation, environmental tax, governance quality, and capital-to-labor ratio decrease the generation of solid waste with a larger size effect in the top-10 recycling sample of countries. However, findings derived from the dynamic elasticity-based interactive effects stress that environmental tax and governance quality enhance the environmental impact of eco-innovation, whereas structural transformation of the economy and capital-to-labor ratio lower the size of this effect, with a much lower magnitude in the bottom-10 recycling OECD economies. Associated policy recommendations are aimed at aiding the design of adequate waste management policies in the OECD, with inclusive knowledge on this topic.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106322
JournalResources, Conservation and Recycling
Volume182
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Eco-innovation
  • Elasticity
  • Municipal solid waste
  • OECD
  • Sustainable development goals

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