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Energy consumption and economic growth: evidence from non-OPEC oil producing states
Authors:Irina Dolgopolova  Qazi Adnan Muhhamad Hye  Iyala Tam Stewart
Institution:1. Service Sector Economics and Management Department, Baikal National University of Economics and Law, Irkutsk, Russia
2. Economics Department, Faculty of Economics and Administration, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
3. Centre for Research in Accounting, Finance & Governance, London South Bank University, London, UK
Abstract:According to the US EIA (2009, www.eia.doe.gov), out of the 15 largest oil producing nations in the world, 7 are not OPEC members, namely Brazil, Canada, China, Mexico, Norway, the Russian Federation, and the United States of America (USA). This paper investigates the causal relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for these non-OPEC oil producing countries. Real GDP per capita is used to measure economic growth; whereas; energy consumption is represented by four sub-variables (electric power, oil, natural gas, and coal energy). Using a panel data covering (1969–2009), this study employs the Pedroni (Econometric Theory, 20, 597–627, 2004) approach to determine cointegration and the (Econometrica, 55, 251–276, 1987) two-step procedure to explore short and long run causal effects. The results suggest that there are long run relationships between the real GDP, labour force, real capital, oil consumption, electricity consumption, gas consumption and coal consumption. Further analyses show that real GDP and oil consumption Granger cause real gross capital formation in the short run; real gross fixed capital and electricity consumption cause oil consumption in the short run; and also oil consumption and gas consumption cause electricity consumption in the short run.
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