Evolution of China's Role in the Structure of Global Carbon Emission Transfers:An Empirical Analysis Based on Network Governance
作者机构:School of Economics and ManagementNanjing Agricultural University Jiangsu Provincial Center for Agricultural Foreign Cooperation and CommunicationChina Paula and Gregory Chow Institute for Studies in EconomicsXiamen UniversityChina China Center for Energy Economics ResearchSchool of Economics and MOE Key Laboratory of EconometricsXiamen UniversityChina
出 版 物:《China & World Economy》 (中国与世界经济(英文版))
年 卷 期:2024年第32卷第1期
页 面:130-166页
核心收录:
学科分类:083002[工学-环境工程] 0830[工学-环境科学与工程(可授工学、理学、农学学位)] 07[理学] 08[工学] 0713[理学-生态学]
基 金:the National Social Science Foundation of China(Nos.21BJL102 and 18BJL118) the Major Program of National Social Science Foundation of China(No.21&ZD109) the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Nos.72074186 and 71673230) the Basic Scientific Center Project of National Science Foundation of China(No.71988101) the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities concerned Chinese Modernization(No.20720231061)
主 题:carbon emission transfers gravity model network governance network search intensity
摘 要:This paper reconsiders the roles of China and some developed countries in the network of carbon emission transfers via international trade in value added from a new perspective of network *** search intensity(NSI)and the extended gravity model are used with cross-country panel data to analyze the mechanism of China s engagement in network governance of carbon emission *** results show that from 2000 to 2009,China was a net exporter of carbon emissions,even though it shifted from the semi-periphery to the core in the network of carbon emissions embodied in ***,NSI had a significant positive impact on carbon emissions embodied in *** China s important role in the global production network and division of labor,NSI may also affect industrial structure and the quality of the ecological environment to a large *** study analyses the network governance mechanism of China s participation in global carbon *** results suggest that the technical complexity of export products and product heterogeneity do not change the positive impact of NSI on carbon emissions.