Inflation bites: the dynamic interdependence between financial market volatility and energy consumption during pandemic
Inflation bites: the dynamic interdependence between financial market volatility and energy consumption during pandemic
We examine how energy production, financial systems, and the COVID-19 pandemic influence inflation, eventually offering insights into cleaner energy transition policies. Using monthly data from 108 developed and developing economies from January 2017 to December 2022, we identify three key findings. First, Currency-based inflation poses a disproportionately greater threat to developing economies than to developed nations. It limits developing economies' investment opportunities in clean energy projects and constrains the speed of green technology adoption. Second, Financial instability creates unequal access to environmental and sustainable development funding, with effects that differ between developed and developing economies. Third, Energy production affects inflation differently in developing and developed economies due to significant gaps in sustainable energy infrastructure. Our results suggest that environmental policies should adapt to each country's development level to attain both global sustainability and economic stability.
Hunjra, Ahmed Imran
19967c87-e3e1-4757-9fec-63b10f92052f
Azam, Muhammad
9d319d9f-3c23-4e26-96ef-8a791edd1995
Hewa Wellalage, Nirosha
dd0a12c4-d842-436f-8009-f19b69e6e499
Mishra, Tapas
218ef618-6b3e-471b-a686-15460da145e0
26 September 2025
Hunjra, Ahmed Imran
19967c87-e3e1-4757-9fec-63b10f92052f
Azam, Muhammad
9d319d9f-3c23-4e26-96ef-8a791edd1995
Hewa Wellalage, Nirosha
dd0a12c4-d842-436f-8009-f19b69e6e499
Mishra, Tapas
218ef618-6b3e-471b-a686-15460da145e0
Hunjra, Ahmed Imran, Azam, Muhammad, Hewa Wellalage, Nirosha and Mishra, Tapas
(2025)
Inflation bites: the dynamic interdependence between financial market volatility and energy consumption during pandemic.
International Review of Economics and Finance, 104.
(doi:10.1016/j.iref.2025.104651).
Abstract
We examine how energy production, financial systems, and the COVID-19 pandemic influence inflation, eventually offering insights into cleaner energy transition policies. Using monthly data from 108 developed and developing economies from January 2017 to December 2022, we identify three key findings. First, Currency-based inflation poses a disproportionately greater threat to developing economies than to developed nations. It limits developing economies' investment opportunities in clean energy projects and constrains the speed of green technology adoption. Second, Financial instability creates unequal access to environmental and sustainable development funding, with effects that differ between developed and developing economies. Third, Energy production affects inflation differently in developing and developed economies due to significant gaps in sustainable energy infrastructure. Our results suggest that environmental policies should adapt to each country's development level to attain both global sustainability and economic stability.
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 September 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 September 2025
Published date: 26 September 2025
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 509886
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509886
ISSN: 1059-0560
PURE UUID: ec56ab9d-69ae-4973-bb09-1b1b8274e788
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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2026 17:41
Last modified: 11 Mar 2026 02:47
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Author:
Ahmed Imran Hunjra
Author:
Muhammad Azam
Author:
Nirosha Hewa Wellalage
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