Author
Listed:
- Alina Yakymchuk
(Department of Public Administration, Law and Humanity Sciences, Kherson State Agrarian and Economic University, 25031 Kropyvnytskyi, Ukraine
Department of Management, University of Information Technology and Management, 35-225 Rzeszów, Poland)
- Bogusława Baran-Zgłobicka
(Institute Social and Economic Geography and Spatial Management, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, 20-031 Lublin, Poland)
- Kyrylov Yurii
(Department of Public Administration, Law and Humanity Sciences, Kherson State Agrarian and Economic University, 25031 Kropyvnytskyi, Ukraine)
- Viktoriia Hranovska
(Department of Public Administration, Law and Humanity Sciences, Kherson State Agrarian and Economic University, 25031 Kropyvnytskyi, Ukraine)
- Nataliia Kyrychenko
(Department of Public Administration, Law and Humanity Sciences, Kherson State Agrarian and Economic University, 25031 Kropyvnytskyi, Ukraine)
Abstract
The assessment of humanity’s ecological footprint has become increasingly critical in contemporary discourse due to growing environmental challenges. This study examines the economic evaluation of the ecological footprint with a particular focus on forest ecosystem services and food productivity. Using harmonized secondary data from FAOSTAT, EUROSTAT, the World Bank, and IPBES, the analysis covers selected developed and emerging economies, including the European Union, the United States, China, Brazil, and other representative countries. This study investigates the macroeconomic implications of natural capital degradation by applying a panel data econometric model to European Union countries over the period 2010–2023. Moving beyond descriptive approaches, the research formulates and tests three hypotheses linking biodiversity, environmental pressure, and green transition variables to economic performance. Using harmonized data from Eurostat and Statista, the study employs a fixed-effects regression framework to estimate the impact of biodiversity indicators, greenhouse gas emissions, renewable energy share, and environmental protection expenditures on GDP per capita. The results demonstrate that biodiversity preservation and resource efficiency are positively associated with economic performance, while environmental degradation—proxied by greenhouse gas emissions—exerts a statistically significant negative effect. Additionally, the findings confirm that investments in renewable energy and environmental protection contribute to long-term economic stability. By providing a transparent data structure, explicit variable operationalization, and reproducible econometric specification, the study offers an original empirical contribution to ecological economics and addresses the limitations of prior literature that relied primarily on descriptive synthesis.
Suggested Citation
Alina Yakymchuk & Bogusława Baran-Zgłobicka & Kyrylov Yurii & Viktoriia Hranovska & Nataliia Kyrychenko, 2026.
"The Ecological Footprint in Economic Perspective: Forest Ecosystem Services and Food Productivity,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(12), pages 1-20, June.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:12:p:6035-:d:1965707
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