Renewable energy sources and the shadow economy: Social responsibility against tax evasion

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Type of the article: Research Article

Abstract
The interconnection between renewable energy development and the shadow economy has become increasingly important as governments pursue sustainability objectives alongside fiscal transparency and the fight against tax evasion. This study aims to analyze how informal economic activity shapes the deployment of renewable energy and how renewable initiatives may support economic formalization and social responsibility. A bibliometric study of 161 documents retrieved from Scopus and Web of Science was conducted using Biblioshiny, assessing metadata completeness, thematic structures, author productivity, and collaboration networks. The results show excellent metadata coverage (abstracts, titles, and document types at 100%), though cited references were completely missing (100%), with keywords absent in 18% of records. Research output accelerated after 2015, with 2020 being the year with the highest citation velocity (7.81 citations/year), driven by two publications with over 100 citations each. Thematic mapping identified “renewable energy,” “shadow economy,” and “sustainable development goals” as motor themes, while “circular economy” and “policy uncertainty” emerged as basic but growing clusters. International collaboration accounted for 38% of documents, though single-country studies remain dominant, and citation analysis revealed a steady rise in impact, with top sources surpassing 120 citations. The analysis confirms a growing yet fragmented field, highlights the dual role of informality, from undermining fiscal revenues to supporting decentralized energy, and points to governance, circular economy, and policy risk as critical areas for future research.

Acknowledgment
This study was prepared as part of the project IZURZ1_224119/1 (Swiss National Science Foundation) and the National Scholarship Programme of the Slovak Republic. This article funded by Daugavpils University (Latvia), EKA University of Applied Sciences (Latvia).

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    • Figure 1. Annual scientific production over time
    • Figure 2. Average citation performance per year
    • Figure 3. Tree map of the most frequent keywords
    • Figure 4. Co-occurrence network of keywords
    • Figure 5. Thematic map of keywords
    • Table 1. Completeness of metadata in the analyzed document sample
    • Table 2. The top 10 high-impact papers related to interconnections of the shadow economy and developments of renewable energy, ranked by total citations
    • Table 3. Top 10 journals by local citation impact in the dataset
    • Table 4. Lotka’s Law in the field of research concerning the interconnections between the shadow economy and renewable energy development
    • Table 5. Top 15 authors
    • Table 6. Country-level collaboration analysis
    • Table 7. Synthesis of scholarly studies’ findings about the relationship between the shadow economy (SE) and the development of renewable energy sources (RES)
    • Conceptualization
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Alina Danileviča, Andreas Horsch
    • Data curation
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Alina Danileviča
    • Formal Analysis
      Serhiy Lyeonov
    • Investigation
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Andreas Horsch
    • Methodology
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Andreas Horsch
    • Project administration
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Andreas Horsch
    • Software
      Serhiy Lyeonov
    • Validation
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Alina Danileviča
    • Visualization
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Alina Danileviča
    • Writing – original draft
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Alina Danileviča, Andreas Horsch
    • Writing – review & editing
      Serhiy Lyeonov, Alina Danileviča, Andreas Horsch
    • Funding acquisition
      Alina Danileviča
    • Resources
      Alina Danileviča
    • Supervision
      Andreas Horsch