Abstract
This research investigates the nuanced role of crowdfunding in bridging the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) funding gap. Employing panel data and quantile regression, we move beyond aggregate analysis to examine the heterogeneous impact of crowdfunding on poverty reduction, economic growth, renewable energy, energy intensity, and climate action across countries with varying income levels. Our findings, robust to a battery of econometric tests, reveal that crowdfunding's effectiveness is fundamentally contingent on development stage. While crowdfunding demonstrably contributes to poverty reduction in high-income countries and fosters economic growth in middle- and lower-income nations, it paradoxically associates with increased poverty in the poorest countries and impedes renewable energy adoption in middle-income economies. These starkly heterogeneous effects, often obscured by traditional analysis, underscore the imperative for tailored policy frameworks. Specifically, we argue that maximizing crowdfunding's potential for sustainable development necessitates a shift from universal prescriptions to context-specific interventions that address distributional challenges and promote sustainable investments.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 7-81 |
| Number of pages | 75 |
| Journal | Journal of Balkan Economies and Management |
| Volume | 1 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - May 2025 |