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Essays On The Macroeconomic Effects Of Oil Price Shocks On The U.S. Economy

Essays On The Macroeconomic Effects Of Oil Price Shocks On The U.S. Economy
Author: Romita Mukherjee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 464
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

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A large volume of research has acknowledged the role of oil price shocks to generate a significant stagflationary impact on U.S. and other oil importing nations. Recent research however shows a paradigm shift in this oil price-macroeconomy relationship since the mid 1980s, during which the U.S. economy has been relatively resilient to oil shocks. Both output contraction and inflationary expectations have been milder in the post mid 1980s than before. But the 2007-08 oil shock episode has re-emphasized the immense impact of the ebbs and flows of oil prices on the U.S. economys ups and downs. Global oil price peaked at $148 a barrel in June 2008. With the mortgage crisis and credit crunch, oil was another blow too many. The U.S. economy swamped into one of the greatest recessions of all times. According to Hamilton (2009), the 2007-08 oil shock had a significant contribution to the recent recession. While a lot of work have been done on the effects of oil price shocks on the U.S. economy, relatively little work has investigated what triggers oil price increase. My research illustrates why it is important to study the cause of an oil price rise. First, the effects of oil price rise on the macro variables depend heavily on what causes the shock. Secondly, whereas the oil price hikes of the 1970s and early 1980s can mostly be attributed to exogenous events in OPEC (Arab Oil Embargo, Iran-Iraq War, Iranian Revolution), a significant source of oil price spikes in the post mid 1980 era have been an increase in global oil demand confronting stagnating oil production. From a policy perspective, of course, policies aimed at dealing with higher oil prices must take careful account of what causes oil prices to rise. Empirical research that demonstrates the resilience of U.S. economy to oil price shocks builds on the implicit assumption that as oil price varies, everything else in the global economy is held constant. Thus all variations in oil prices are taken as alike and exogenous. This overlooks the possibility that oil price rise sparked off by diverse events can potentially lead to different repercussions. This thesis is an attempt to develop framework to study the endogenous increase in oil price. The oil price increase arises from increase in U.S. growth rate, increase in foreign growth rate and a purely exogenous oil supply shock by OPEC. The most important result is that the source of oil price rise has changed after the mid 1980s - whereas before the mid 1980s, bulk of the variation in oil price was due to supply shocks by OPEC, post mid 1980s, most of the variation in oil price is explained by increase in U.S. and foreign growth. Furthermore, if the origin of the oil price rise is the same, then the responses of most U.S. macroeconomic variables display remarkable similarity in the pre and post mid 1980s. This result gives us a new way to look at the resilience of the U.S. economic activity to oil price rise since the mid 1980s. The resilience can be explained to a significant extent by the fact that the type of shocks resulting in oil price rise has changed.


Essays on Fluctuations of the Crude Oil Price and the Economy

Essays on Fluctuations of the Crude Oil Price and the Economy
Author: Junchuan Jesse Zeng
Publisher:
Total Pages: 104
Release: 2013
Genre: Electronic dissertations
ISBN:

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This dissertation studies two major topics related to the crude oil price and the economy. The first topic studied is about the relationship between speculation and the crude oil price and the related implications on the macroeconomic growth and inflation. The second topic is about the relationship between the oil price volatility and the US stock market. It includes two subtopics: i) the volatility spillovers between the crude oil market and the US stock market and ii) the relationship between oil price volatility and real stock returns on the US market. This dissertation has four chapters, with each of the two major topics studied relatively independently in their respective chapters. In the first chapter, we introduce the background and motivation for the topics studied in this dissertation. Additionally, we also give an overview of the results and important findings. In the second chapter, we examine the impact of speculative information on the oil price and the corresponding implications on the macroeconomy. We use a structural vector autoregression (VAR) model to decompose the shocks of the crude oil price and use the gold price as a proxy for the speculative information. We argue that using the gold price to account for speculative information is a very informative alternative to the other indicators used in literature. Our results show that speculative information plays a very important role in driving crude oil price shocks; it accounts for about 20% of the variation of the oil price. Furthermore, we show that speculative shocks to the crude oil price are correlated to future macroeconomic downturns. We also show that speculative shocks may create inflation pressure, although the effect is not as strong as that on the macroeconomic output growth. In the third chapter, we use a generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) specification to model the volatility on both the oil and stock markets and then utilize an extension of the GARCH-M (GARCH in mean) vector autoregression (VAR) model introduced in Elder (2004) to capture the volatility spillover relationship between the two markets and the relationship between the volatility of the oil price and stock returns at the same time. Further, we detect a structural change of the oil price-stock returns relationship near the middle of 1987. A unidirectional volatility spillover from the stock market to the oil market is found to be statistically significant before the break, while a negative relationship between oil price volatility and the conditional mean of stock returns is more pronounced afterwards. We argue that several events happening around the break point are likely to be the causes for the structural change. In the last chapter, we summarize the work and highlight the important results in this dissertation. In addition, we also discuss possible future research directions.


Essays in Macroeconomic Econometrics

Essays in Macroeconomic Econometrics
Author: Vladimir Bejan
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

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This dissertation consists of three essays in macroeconomic econometrics. The first essay investigates industry level production functions. Part of the interest in doing this is to contribute to the ongoing improvements in dynamic macroeconomic models which are increasingly disaggregating economies into industrial sectors. This paper provides useful production function parameter values for this endeavour. In addition, the paper shows that there are differences across industry level production functions, so model disaggregation cannot rely on a generic scaled down aggregate production function. Futhermore, evidence of these differences is provided in several ways. First, it is shown that some, but not all, industry level production functions exhibit constant returns to scale. Second, conducted pairwise tests show whether government capital production elasticities are the same for different pairs of industries. In the majority of these tests, the null hypothesis was rejected. In the second essay, the relevance of wage rigidities for understanding the effect of oil price shocks on output and inflation is examined. The theoretical framework of Blanchard and Gali (2007) is adopted and modified in two important ways. First, an empirically estimated wage adjustment cost function is incorporated following work by Kim and Ruge-Murcia (2009). Second, a realistic monetary policy function is incorporated into the model to be consistent with the current macroeconomic literature. The paper provides evidence that the degree of wage stickiness has little effect on the oil price-macroeconomy relationship. We find that the only way to generate large changes in the variances of output and inflation is to increase the wage adjustment cost by an extreme amount. The third essay assesses the statistical adequacy of the Cobb-Douglas aggregate production function with public capital as an input. The paper tests the statistical adequacy of the models proposed by Aschauer (1989a) and Tatom (1991) and finds that both models are misspecified. Furthermore, the paper finds that Tatom's model suffers from the same criticism he levels against Aschauer's model, non-stationarity in the data series used to estimate the model. Using Aschauer's framework, a properly specified model is found that models both deterministic heterogeneity and serial autocoreelation. Model results find that public capital is positive and significant. The results are in contrast to a large body of literature that discredits Aschauer's findings claiming his model is incorrect. Finally, an additional specification of the model using the student's t linear regression model is explored to capture potential heteroskedasticity.


Oil Prices and the Global Economy

Oil Prices and the Global Economy
Author: Mr.Rabah Arezki
Publisher: International Monetary Fund
Total Pages: 30
Release: 2017-01-27
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1475572360

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This paper presents a simple macroeconomic model of the oil market. The model incorporates features of oil supply such as depletion, endogenous oil exploration and extraction, as well as features of oil demand such as the secular increase in demand from emerging-market economies, usage efficiency, and endogenous demand responses. The model provides, inter alia, a useful analytical framework to explore the effects of: a change in world GDP growth; a change in the efficiency of oil usage; and a change in the supply of oil. Notwithstanding that shale oil production today is more responsive to prices than conventional oil, our analysis suggests that an era of prolonged low oil prices is likely to be followed by a period where oil prices overshoot their long-term upward trend.