Energy prices, energy conservation, and economic growth: Evidence from the postwar United States |
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Authors: | Jang C. Jin Jai-Young Choi Eden S.H. Yu |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Decision Sciences and Managerial Economics, Faculty of Business Administration, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong;bDepartment of Economics and Finance, Lamar University, USA;cDepartment of Economics and Finance, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong |
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Abstract: | The effects of energy prices and energy conservation on economic growth have been examined empirically for the postwar U.S. economy. A vector autoregressive model includes real GDP, real capital, labor, real energy prices, and the Divisia energy index. A key feature of our finding is that some damaging effects of energy conservation on the macroeconomy are statistically insignificant in the short run, and the insignificant short-run effects are quickly enervated over time. Alternative measures of energy use also suggest that energy conservation has no significant impact on real output growth. The findings are generally consistent with the neoclassical position that real economic growth of the United States is neutral with respect to changes in energy use. One exception is the case that energy prices are omitted from the model. |
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Keywords: | Energy conservation Economic growth Energy prices Variance decompositions Impulse responses |
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