M
Muhammad Athar Nadeem
Researcher at University of Science and Technology of China
Publications - 16
Citations - 436
Muhammad Athar Nadeem is an academic researcher from University of Science and Technology of China. The author has contributed to research in topics: Foreign direct investment & Empirical research. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 15 publications receiving 169 citations. Previous affiliations of Muhammad Athar Nadeem include Government College University, Faisalabad.
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Symmetric and asymmetric impact of oil price, FDI and economic growth on carbon emission in Pakistan: Evidence from ARDL and non-linear ARDL approach
Muhammad Yousaf Malik,Kashmala Latif,Zeeshan Khan,Hassan Daud Butt,Mudassar Hussain,Muhammad Athar Nadeem +5 more
TL;DR: This study confirms the EKC hypothesis for Pakistan under both methodologies, whereas symmetric results show that economic growth and FDI intensify carbon emission in both the long and short-run, whereas asymmetric results in the long-run show that an increase inOil price reduces emissions and decrease in oil price intensify emissions.
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China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) development projects and entrepreneurial potential of locals
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Impact of positivity and empathy on social entrepreneurial intention: The moderating role of perceived social support
Amna Younis,Peng Xiaobao,Muhammad Athar Nadeem,Shamsa Kanwal,Abdul Hameed Pitafi,Gui Qiong,Duan Yuzhen +6 more
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Investigating the Adoption Factors of Cryptocurrencies—A Case of Bitcoin: Empirical Evidence From China:
TL;DR: The share of electronic transactions in the global payments continues to increase all around the globe as mentioned in this paper, and cryptocurrencies have become a system of electronic transaction (e.g., Bitcoin) in the recent years.
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Impact of shared goals on knowledge hiding behavior: the moderating role of trust
TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors explored knowledge hiding behavior in relation to shared goals of individuals working in teams and trust as a boundary condition on shared goals and knowledge hiding relationship, and found that shared goals are negatively associated with knowledge hiding behaviour.