Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS)
The economic effects of environmental policies are of paramount interest to policymakers. The traditional approach focuses on using income (Gross Domestic Product) as the leading indicator for the effects of environment policies. Higher GDP indicates that the economy is doing well but it does not fu...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-738002019-12-10T14:31:54Z Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS) Aw, Eugene Wei En Lim, Yong Hui Yeo, Clinton Jun Rong James Ang School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences The economic effects of environmental policies are of paramount interest to policymakers. The traditional approach focuses on using income (Gross Domestic Product) as the leading indicator for the effects of environment policies. Higher GDP indicates that the economy is doing well but it does not fully account for an individual’s economic welfare. Happiness is not only derived from an increase in income, which is why studies that link environmental policies to happiness are of great interest. Using cross-country data, our results suggest that there is a significant relationship between EPS and a nation’s well-being, where a more stringent environmental policy leads to an improved well-being. The dominant view in current literature is that income is the most influential factor that affects happiness level. Even after controlling for GDP in our regressions, the estimates have proven that EPS is still significant in increasing a country’s happiness level. Our results lead to important policy implications, where governments around the world can increase the happiness level of their citizens by implementing stricter environmental policies. Bachelor of Arts 2018-04-12T04:22:57Z 2018-04-12T04:22:57Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73800 en Nanyang Technological University 23 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences Aw, Eugene Wei En Lim, Yong Hui Yeo, Clinton Jun Rong Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS) |
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The economic effects of environmental policies are of paramount interest to policymakers. The traditional approach focuses on using income (Gross Domestic Product) as the leading indicator for the effects of environment policies. Higher GDP indicates that the economy is doing well but it does not fully account for an individual’s economic welfare. Happiness is not only derived from an increase in income, which is why studies that link environmental policies to happiness are of great interest. Using cross-country data, our results suggest that there is a significant relationship between EPS and a nation’s well-being, where a more stringent environmental policy leads to an improved well-being. The dominant view in current literature is that income is the most influential factor that affects happiness level. Even after controlling for GDP in our regressions, the estimates have proven that EPS is still significant in increasing a country’s happiness level. Our results lead to important policy implications, where governments around the world can increase the happiness level of their citizens by implementing stricter environmental policies. |
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James Ang |
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James Ang Aw, Eugene Wei En Lim, Yong Hui Yeo, Clinton Jun Rong |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Aw, Eugene Wei En Lim, Yong Hui Yeo, Clinton Jun Rong |
author_sort |
Aw, Eugene Wei En |
title |
Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS) |
title_short |
Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS) |
title_full |
Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS) |
title_fullStr |
Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Well-being and environmental policy stringency (EPS) |
title_sort |
well-being and environmental policy stringency (eps) |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73800 |
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1681042135581720576 |