Nemushungwa, A. I.Molocwa, G.Ramavhoya, Ndamulelo Princess2026-06-202026-06-202026-05-19Ramavhoya, N.P. 2026. The Impact of Unconventional Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Green Energy Investment: Evidence for South Africa. . .https://univendspace.univen.ac.za/handle/11602/3263MCom in EconomicsDepartment of EconomicsThe global transition to a green economy demands substantial investments from both public and private sectors, with profound implications for employment, living standards, and long-term economic resilience. This transformation is occurring amid heightened global financial uncertainty, liquidity constraints, and heightened risk aversion. Against this backdrop, this study investigates the impact of unconventional monetary and fiscal policies on green energy investment in South Africa. In response, governments and central banks have implemented unconventional monetary and fiscal policy tools, such as carbon taxes, green bonds, and green quantitative easing (GQE), to mobilise capital toward renewable energy and sustainable production. While these instruments have gained global attention, their effectiveness in stimulating green investment remains uncertain, particularly in developing economies like South Africa, where structural challenges persist, including limited financial resources, weak regulatory frameworks, and underdeveloped capital markets. Using annual time-series data from 1990 to 2024, the analysis employs the Nonlinear Structural Break Autoregressive Distributed Lag (NSB-ARDL) model to capture both short- and long-run symmetric and asymmetric effects of these policies. By addressing existing knowledge gaps, the study aims to enhance understanding of how climate-related macroeconomic policies are transmitted in middle-income, carbon-intensive economies with significant structural barriers. The findings are expected to demonstrate that unconventional policy measures can play a pivotal role in mobilising investment toward sustainable energy, supporting South Africa’s transition to a low-carbon economy.1 online resource (xiv, 168 leaves)enUniversity of VendaUnconventional monetary policyUCTDUnconventional fiscal policyGreen energy investmentGreen quantitative easingRenewable energySouth AfricaThe Impact of Unconventional Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Green Energy Investment: Evidence for South AfricaDissertationRamavhoya NP. The Impact of Unconventional Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Green Energy Investment: Evidence for South Africa. []. , 2026 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from:Ramavhoya, N. P. (2026). <i>The Impact of Unconventional Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Green Energy Investment: Evidence for South Africa</i>. (). . Retrieved fromRamavhoya, Ndamulelo Princess. <i>"The Impact of Unconventional Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Green Energy Investment: Evidence for South Africa."</i> ., , 2026.TY - Dissertation AU - Ramavhoya, Ndamulelo Princess AB - The global transition to a green economy demands substantial investments from both public and private sectors, with profound implications for employment, living standards, and long-term economic resilience. This transformation is occurring amid heightened global financial uncertainty, liquidity constraints, and heightened risk aversion. Against this backdrop, this study investigates the impact of unconventional monetary and fiscal policies on green energy investment in South Africa. In response, governments and central banks have implemented unconventional monetary and fiscal policy tools, such as carbon taxes, green bonds, and green quantitative easing (GQE), to mobilise capital toward renewable energy and sustainable production. While these instruments have gained global attention, their effectiveness in stimulating green investment remains uncertain, particularly in developing economies like South Africa, where structural challenges persist, including limited financial resources, weak regulatory frameworks, and underdeveloped capital markets. Using annual time-series data from 1990 to 2024, the analysis employs the Nonlinear Structural Break Autoregressive Distributed Lag (NSB-ARDL) model to capture both short- and long-run symmetric and asymmetric effects of these policies. By addressing existing knowledge gaps, the study aims to enhance understanding of how climate-related macroeconomic policies are transmitted in middle-income, carbon-intensive economies with significant structural barriers. The findings are expected to demonstrate that unconventional policy measures can play a pivotal role in mobilising investment toward sustainable energy, supporting South Africa’s transition to a low-carbon economy. DA - 2026-05-19 DB - ResearchSpace DP - Univen KW - Unconventional monetary policy KW - Unconventional fiscal policy KW - Green energy investment KW - Green quantitative easing KW - Renewable energy KW - South Africa LK - https://univendspace.univen.ac.za PY - 2026 T1 - The Impact of Unconventional Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Green Energy Investment: Evidence for South Africa TI - The Impact of Unconventional Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Green Energy Investment: Evidence for South Africa UR - ER -