Energy consumption and economic growth in Asian economies: A more comprehensive analysis using panel data |
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Authors: | Chien-Chiang Lee Chun-Ping Chang |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Applied Economics, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan;2. Agricultural Policy Research Center, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan;3. Department of Business Administration, Shih Chien University Kaohsiung Campus, Kaohsiung, Taiwan |
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Abstract: | This paper applies the most recently developed panel unit root, heterogeneous panel cointegration and panel-based error correction models to re-investigate co-movement and the causal relationship between energy consumption and real GDP within a multivariate framework that includes capital stock and labor input for 16 Asian countries during the 1971–2002 period. It employs the production side model (aggregate production function). The empirical results fully support a positive long-run cointegrated relationship between real GDP and energy consumption when the heterogeneous country effect is taken into account. It is found that although economic growth and energy consumption lack short-run causality, there is long-run unidirectional causality running from energy consumption to economic growth. This means that reducing energy consumption does not adversely affect GDP in the short-run but would in the long-run; thus, these countries should adopt a more vigorous energy policy. Furthermore, we broaden the investigation by dividing the sample countries into two cross-regional groups, namely the APEC and ASEAN groups, and even more important results and implications emerge. |
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