1. Introduction
Concerns about environmental sustainability are closely linked to the global stance against the vexed issue of global warming and climate change. The general consensus is that the rapid economic and social progress achieved in the past three decades, driven largely by fossil fuels, along with rapid growth in the human population is unsustainable. These concerns are exacerbated by the economic expansion with significant environmental disruptions, which occur at the national and international levels, exposing the entire world to danger [
1]. Arguably, the increased attention given to the environmental question is also in accepting the fact that environmental sustainability remains one of the compelling cardinal targets of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Therefore, there exists the need for a proper interrogation of the environmental questions at all levels of governance, especially in Africa.
Based on the increasingly negative impact of climate change in Africa, the issue of environmental sustainability has become a top policy issue in recent times. The continent is most vulnerable to the effects of climate change under all climate scenarios above 1.5 °C, which is the global target. Even though, by comparison, Africa has a lesser contribution to global warming and other significant climate changes, the continent has been facing existential exponential collateral and environmental damages, leading to systemic risks in its economies, infrastructure investments, public health, water and food systems, agriculture, and livelihoods. All of these threaten to undo Africa’s modest development gains and, therefore, slip into higher levels of extreme poverty [
2]. To actively tackle the menace of environmental degradation and achieve a sustainable environment, the sub-Saharan African countries have signed and ratified the Paris Agreement and other related climate action consensuses towards reducing greenhouse gas and building alternative energy resources.
In addition to the over-dependence on fossil fuel energy to drive economic expansion, the African continent also faces the challenge of corruption in its efforts to achieve environmental sustainability. Corruption can be seen as the abuse of power, by the persons entrusted with it, for personal gains [
3,
4]. There are many forms of corruption, but the most common and worrisome form of corruption is financial corruption, which takes the form of bribes, kickbacks, inappropriate gifts, double-dealing, and other forms of dishonest financial dealings with Transparency International. The extant literature suggests that corruption influences the quality of the environment in two ways. First, it affects the environment by distorting the flow of investments and economic activities that may lead to improvement in the quality of the environment [
3,
4,
5]. Second, corruption can destabilize the stringency of environmental laws and regulations, thereby exerting a negative influence on the environment [
6,
7,
8].
While several studies [
3,
4,
6,
9] confirm that corruption aggravates CO
2 emissions and degrades the environment, little attention has been given to the effects of control of corruption on the quality of the environment. Meanwhile, unabated corruption may lead to the diversion or misappropriation of resources meant for promoting sustainable material consumption and combating environmental degradation. For instance, [
10] found corruption in Tunisia to have been associated negatively with environmental quality measured by CO
2 emissions. Moreover, [
11] divulged that the lower the corruption, the more energy efficiency there is for all income group economies. Since the control of corruption is expensive (requiring the setting up of agencies, procurement of modern equipment and gadgets, as well as personnel costs), countries with high levels of income are likely to achieve higher successes in the control of corruption.
Furthermore, as a continent of developing countries, Africa is seen as a haven for polluting industries due to the weak environmental laws, consistent with the pollution haven hypothesis which postulates that; developing economies keep their domestic environmental regulations laxer, thus offering the highly polluting multinational corporations the opportunity to move in their investments in form of foreign direct investment (FDI) [
12,
13,
14]. The argument in support of FDI is that it enhances the transfer of technological innovation and consequently, provides the basis for the implementation of greener and cleaner modes of production [
13]. In contrast, the economic literature argues that the FDI-induced environmental consequences due to increased CO
2 emissions outweigh the economic benefits associated with FDI inflows. To balance up, there is, therefore, a need for the African countries to quickly align to the global trend of increasing the share of renewable energy in the total energy mix. Renewable energy consumption is crucial in reducing CO
2 emissions and achieving green growth. In this regard, most African countries have started diversifying their energy portfolios by increasing the share of renewables in their total energy mix [
1,
15,
16,
17,
18]. Empirically, several studies have confirmed the effect of renewable energy on reducing environmental degradation [
19,
20].
Given the position of the literature that the environment is always susceptible to continuous destruction when corruption becomes common in government and its agency structures, it becomes apparent that to reduce environmental degradation, institutions that relate to the process of environmental policymaking play an important role. Furthermore, the fight against corruption requires huge funding. Given the level of income in the African continent, it is still not empirically clear whether the fight against corruption can lead to effective environmental protection and sustainability in the continent.
Therefore, the main objective of the study is to examine the impact of the interaction of the control of corruption and income levels on environmental quality in Africa. The current study contributes to the literature by examining the determinants of environmental quality, measured by the level of CO2 emissions in Africa. We show that the control of corruption is a significant determinant of CO2 emissions in Africa, even when interacting with the level of income to account for the relevance of income in addressing the environmental question and achieving sustainable development. Our results also show that for developing countries, such as African countries, renewable energy consumption and foreign direct investment have a significant influence on the quality of the environment.
The rest of the study is organized as follows.
Section 2 deals with a brief literature review.
Section 3 focuses on the methodology.
Section 4 presents the empirical results, and
Section 5 concludes the paper and makes policy recommendations.
2. Literature Review
Theoretically, the relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation is better captured with the famous environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) hypothesis, which hypothesizes an inverse relationship between a country’s level of pollution and its real GDP. However, the validity of the EKC hypothesis remains a disputable fact across countries, perhaps due to variation in the time frame, methodology, and country peculiarities [
19,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25]. In the case of Africa, several studies have presented conflicting submissions regarding the true nature of the relationship between CO
2 emissions (often used as a proxy for environmental pollution) and real income level, thus generating a crisis that does not support sound and formidable policy prescription and, consequently, opening the door for further studies [
23,
26]. Similarly, the study [
27] validated the EKC for Nigeria by taking into account the role of international trade. Thus, the validity of the EKC remains a subject of heated debate in Nigeria.
The extant literature is active on the nexus between corruption and environmental sustainability [
3,
4,
5,
28,
29]. The popular opinion is that corruption may stimulate environmental degradation in direct and indirect ways [
5]. For instance, [
3] applied a dynamic ARDL simulation technique to study the effects of social and economic factors on the environmental quality in Nigeria. While economic growth increased environmental degradation in Nigeria, corruption and internal conflict reduced environmental degradation through a decrease in investments and growth. The authors of [
5] used system GMM on provincial panel data in China’s industry from 2005 to 2015 to establish that corruption influences CO
2 emission through the distortion of environmental policy and by lowering the monitoring levels. Moreover, [
9] used a panel quantile regression method to study how corruption affects CO
2 emissions and economic growth in Africa. The results revealed the following: (i) a higher level of corruption in Africa; (ii) corruption is negatively related to CO
2 emissions in lower emission countries; (iii) in higher emission countries, corruption is not a significant enough factor to explain changes in CO
2 emissions; and (iv) corruption is positively affected by CO
2 emissions. This positive effect supersedes the negative effect, and hence, the total effect of corruption is positive. Similarly, [
4] studied the environmental sustainability impact of corruption using panel data on 16 southern African countries. Applying system GMM and DH Granger causality, the study divulged that corruption causes environmental quality in southern African countries. Wang et al. (2018), in a study, evaluated the nexus between economic growth and carbon emissions within the context of the environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis, covering the period from 1996 to 2017 for the BRICS countries. The results of the study showed that corruption control could reduce carbon emissions. Furthermore, Sinha et al. (2019), in their study involving BRICS and the Next Eleven countries, asserted that corruption dampens environmental quality. Likewise, [
10] examined Tunisia’s case of the effects of corruption on CO
2 emissions and energy consumption. Applying the ARDL modeling technique, the study presented that corruption is related negatively to environmental quality, which is perhaps measured by CO
2 emissions, while its effect on energy consumption is negative and statistically significant.
Regarding the nexus between FDI and CO
2 emission, [
30] in a study on 55 Asia-Pacific countries observed that developing countries, such as most of the African countries, adopted convenient environmental regulations for various reasons, including the fact that economic growth is the major objective of these countries and not the quality of the environment. The study established that FDI causes a rise in CO
2 emissions and contributes to environmental deterioration. Corroboration of this assertion was the study of [
31], which showed that FDI brings beneficial environmental impacts to developed countries, while it brings negative impacts to the environmental quality of poor or developing nations. The authors of [
32], using green technology, FDI, and environmental regulation, found that environmental regulation has a significant effect on green technology innovation and that FDI causes green technology innovation to decrease. Ref. [
33] applied PMG and the DH causality test to study the effect of ICGT and inflows of foreign direct investment on environmental degradation in some Asia-Pacific countries. The study found that foreign investment and ICT have a long-running negative impact on the environment. The authors of [
12] examined the effect of foreign direct investment on CO
2 emissions in Pakistan from 1971 to 2014, within the context of the Pollution Haven Hypothesis. Using the ARDL and the ECM models, the results of the study confirmed the increasing effects of FDI on CO
2 emissions, thereby upholding the Pollution Haven Hypothesis. Applying the non-linear approach, [
34] explored the relationship between foreign direct investment and environmental degradation in high-income, middle-income, and low-income countries. The results suggested that the environmental Kuznets curve exists, and foreign direct investment increases environmental degradation, also supporting the existence of the Pollution Haven Hypothesis. The authors of [
30] in a study on the effect of inward FDI on environmental quality in China showed an inverse U-shape relationship between inward FDI and carbon emissions for the aggregate samples, while the provincial divisions presented heterogeneous results. These findings are confirmed by the studies of [
13] which suggested that the entry of FDI into Latin American countries increases CO
2 emissions and consequently dampens the environmental quality.
Concerning the role of renewable energy use and environmental sustainability, the authors of [
35], in a study on the nexus between renewable energy use and environmental protection of the Next Eleven developing economies, showed an inverse relationship between renewable energy and CO
2 emission. The authors of [
36] confirmed the results for 25 selected African countries by establishing that renewable energy consumption decreases CO
2 emissions. Similarly, the studies [
20,
23] indicated that renewable energy consumption has a significant effect in reducing CO
2 emissions.
The review of the empirical literature shows that there are few studies and supporting data evaluating the consequences of corruption on environmental sustainability in the emerging economies of Africa, generally regarded as the most corrupt continent on the globe. Moreover, there are few or no studies focusing on the control of corruption’s effect on the environment in Africa. Our study is the first, to the best of our knowledge, that focuses on the interactive effects of the control of corruption and income level on the environmental quality in Africa. This is particularly important because the fight against corruption is expensive, and therefore, countries with higher income levels may likely attain higher levels of environmental quality traceable to the pursuit of the control of corruption than countries with lower income levels. In addition, our study uses robust econometric procedures (Method of Moments Quantile Regression (MMQR) with fixed effects) to show how the interaction term with other control variables affects environmental quality across the quantile distribution. Finally, we used the Driscoll–Kraay standard errors based on the estimations of fixed-effects OLS and GLS random effect to control for serial correlation and cross-sectional dependence.
5. Conclusions
Given the intensive war against corruption in Africa over the years, there is a high expectation that such a move will help to achieve a structural transformation of the economies in Africa. In this study, we examined not only the effects of the control of corruption on environmental quality but also the extent to which the level of income of a country plays in influencing the impact of control of corruption on environmental quality in Africa. To achieve this objective, we applied the technique of MMQR with fixed effect, which controls for heterogeneity, and also OLS-FE, GLS-FE, and Pooled OLS with Driscoll–Kraay standard errors. These estimations controlled for cross-sectional dependence. Having found evidence in support of the integration of variables explored and their cointegration, the empirical results suggested that the effects of the control of corruption, income level, and foreign direct investment on environmental quality were positively significant, while renewable energy consumption dampened the quality of the environment. However, the effect of the interaction of the control of corruption and income level improved environmental quality in Africa. These results, therefore, suggested that income level plays a vital role in how the control of corruption crusade reduces environmental degradation. Moreover, the positive effect of inflows of foreign direct investment suggested that Africa is a dumping ground where high-intensive carbon-emitting firms operate because of environmental laws and regulations that are not stringent.
Following the results of this study, there are many policy recommendations. These recommendations will help the policymakers to draft environmental policies to achieve low-carbon economies in Africa. As shown by the results, income level forms the basis upon which the war against corruption can mitigate environmental degradation. Therefore, there is a need to stimulate income levels to influence an effective control of corruption. This can be achieved by stimulating consumption and investment in clean energy. Moreover, stimulating consumption and investment requires government and stakeholders to create an enabling environment to attract inflows of foreign investment in addition to domestic investment. Moreover, since renewable energy reduces CO2 emissions, government policies need to target investment in the clean energy sector rather than in fossil fuels. To achieve this, subsidies, carbon tax, tax holidays, environmental taxes, etc. are suggested as operational instruments. The implication of this study further displays the need to strengthen the laws and regulations concerning the environment in Africa. In other words, since the African continent is a dumping ground for many highly carbon-intensive industries, there is a need to strengthen and implement effective environmental laws and regulations in Africa. Such environmental taxes should include taxes on pollution, taxes on resources, taxes on transport, and taxes on other activities that contribute to the upward trend of CO2 emissions in Africa. Furthermore, a growing income level was found as one of the channels through which Africa increases the level of CO2 and greenhouse gases. Therefore, to achieve the environmental sustainability target, there is a need for Africa to shift from carbon-intensive-led growth to a green growth path. This can be achieved by promoting a cleaner environment through clean energy consumption.
Finally, this study may have some practical limitations. Africa’s economies are quite different from other continental economies such as Asia and South America. Therefore, the policy recommendations in this study might have a limited application in these countries. Therefore, we suggest that a similar study could be carried out in the continents mentioned to find out how their levels of income interact with the control of corruption to achieve environmental quality. Better still, future studies could use the World Bank classifications of countries’ income levels and compare how income levels influence the impact of the control of corruption on environmental degradation in these categories of countries.