EXAMINING THE LINK BETWEEN ENVIRONMENTAL TAX VOLATILITY AND THE SHIFT TO RENEWABLE ENERGY IN UKRAINE

Main Article Content

Benjamin Yeboah
Samuel Addo-Paintsil
Mark Yaw Baffoe
Eric Antwi

Abstract

Environmental taxes are increasingly used as fiscal instruments to internalize environmental externalities and finance renewable energy investments. Environmental taxes are increasingly utilized as fiscal instruments to internalize environmental externalities and finance renewable energy investments. This study examines the nonlinear, regime-dependent relationship between environmental tax volatility and the renewable energy transition in Ukraine, aiming to identify stable tax regimes that effectively support renewable energy development. The study employs annual time-series data from the World Development Indicators covering the period 1980-2023. Preliminary analyses include descriptive statistics, unit root tests (ADF and PP), OLS estimation, and non-linearity diagnostics (BDS and CUSUM tests). Ordinary Least Squares results indicate that a 1% increase in environmental tax revenue increases renewable energy transition by 0.8329% (p < 0.01). Markov switching results identify two distinct regimes. Regime 2 records a higher coefficient (0.7812) and stronger persistence (P22 = 0.970) compared to Regime 1 (0.7016; P11 = 0.909). Regime 2 demonstrates lower volatility, higher mean values (0.9337), and a longer duration of approximately 33 years, indicating a stable and sustained environmental tax regime that effectively supports renewable energy transition. Maintaining stable, consistent environmental tax regimes should be the top priority for policymakers to ensure stable, consistent funding for renewable energy investments, build greater public trust, and accelerate the achievement of SDG 7 in Ukraine.


JEL Classification Codes: H2, Q2, Q4.

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Section

Research Paper/Theoretical Paper/Review Paper/Short Communication Paper

Author Biographies

Benjamin Yeboah , Senior Lecturer, Phd, Business School, Kumasi Technical University, Accountancy and Information Systems Department, Kumasi, Ghana

Dr. Benjamin Yeboah is an academic at Kumasi Technical University with over 22 years of experience in teaching auditing and 5 years as the head of internal audit unit of Ejisu Municipal Assembly. My research focuses on value relevance, accounting quality, IFRS adoption, climate vulnerability, and environmental tax, with publications in these areas. I’m also involved in transitioning to learning Python software in business.

Samuel Addo-Paintsil , Lecturer, Business School, Kumasi Technical University, Accountancy and Information Systems Department, Kumasi, Ghana

Samuel Addo-Paintsil has extensive experience in academia and industry, with over 20 years of teaching Financial Accounting, Management Accounting, and Performance Management. He has taught at both professional and academic levels. His expertise spans Financial Accounting instruction across various levels and contexts.

Mark Yaw Baffoe , PhD Student, Catholic University of Ghana, Fac. of Economics & Business Administration (EBA), Sunyani, Ghana

Mark Yaw Baffoe is a PhD student at the Catholic University of Ghana, researching in Public Sector Financial Management, corruption, IFRS-accounting numbers and financial governance. I obtained MPhil from AAMUSTED and BSc from KNUST. I have 10 years of experience in Ghana's Civil Service. 

Eric Antwi , IT Statistics Student, KsTU & Uaddara Military Barracks, Ghana Armed Forces, Kumasi, Ghana

Eric Antwi is a Certified Cybersecurity Professional with 9+ years of experience in IT support, management, and cybersecurity across various sectors. He currently works with the Ghana Armed Forces, handling IT operations, system availability, and technology governance. Eric holds an MSc in Cyber Security and Digital Forensics from KNUST and has a strong background in IT support, networking, web development, and cybersecurity.

How to Cite

Yeboah , B. ., Addo-Paintsil , S. ., Baffoe , M. Y. ., & Antwi , E. . (2025). EXAMINING THE LINK BETWEEN ENVIRONMENTAL TAX VOLATILITY AND THE SHIFT TO RENEWABLE ENERGY IN UKRAINE. International Journal of Accounting & Finance Review, 16(2), 15-25. https://doi.org/10.46281/ijafr.v16i1.2790

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