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Explore the relationship between primary energy consumption and GDP growth in a study covering 33 countries from 1970 to 2011. The analysis involves panel data and estimation of long-run relations, including the role of variables like capital formation and population in economic growth. Various tests, such as unit root and co-integration tests, are conducted to assess the robustness of the findings. The results indicate that primary energy is a significant driver of GDP growth, with long-run output elasticity at approximately 0.6, surpassing the impact of capital accumulation. The study suggests a decoupling of energy use and GDP share, emphasizing the importance of energy efficiency in sustainable economic growth. Energy is found to Granger cause GDP in the long run, highlighting the intertwined nature of energy consumption and economic development.
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How Dependent Is Growth From Primary Energy? An Empirical Answer on 33 Countries www.theshiftproject.org
Outline • Introduction • Empirical methodology • The data • Time series properties of the data • Conclusion
Introduction Why is this relationship important ? • Mainstream economic models do not include energy as a factor that could foster economic growth. • Ecological economists, often ascribe to energy the central role in economic growth. • Is energy an important driver of economic growth ? • If so, what is the magnitude of the dependency of growth from energy ?
Introduction Why is this relationship important ? Oil prices and World GDP (1965 – 2011) Sources: BP statistical Review, 2012, Shilling et al. 1977, EIA, 2012, and World Bank (GDP), 2012.
Introduction Why is this relationship important ? Primary Energy Consumption and GDP (1965 – 2011) Source : BP statistical review, 2012, Shilling et al. 1977, EIA, 2012, and World Bank (GDP), 2012.
Introduction Why is this relationship important ? The GDP share of primary energy, U.S., 1970-2010. Source: EIA, http://www.eia.gov/totalenergy/data/annual/pdf/sec1_13.pdf
Empirical methodology • Variables under scrutiny is: • Primary energy consumption (million tons of oil equivalents) • GDP (in 2000 U.S dollars) • Gross Fixed Capital Formation (in 2000 U.S dollars) • Population (millions) World Bank, World Development Indicators
The data • The analysis is based on a panel data covering the period from 1970 to 2011 for 33countries.
Estimation of the long run relation The main equation: lnGDPi,t= βi,0+βi,1 lnNRGi,t+βi,2 lnEFFi,t-1+βi,3 lnKi,t+εi,t All the variables are per capita
Time series properties of the data Cross section dependence, Unit Root and Co-integration tests • Cross Section Dependence Test of Pesaran • Unit Root Tests: • First Generation: • Levin, Lin and Chu test • Breitung • Im, Pesaran and Shin • ADF-Fisher • Philips Perron– Fisher • Second Generation: • CIPS test • Co-integration Tests: • Pedroni’s residual co-integration tests • Westerlund test common unit root process Individual unit root process
Emprical Results Co-integration tests results Table 5. Pedroni Residual Cointegration Test Table 6. Westerlund panel cointegration test results
Emprical Results Estimation of the long run relation Can we quantify this long-run relationship ? The short-run speed of convergence towards the equilibrium relation ?An ECM approach: "ϕi" is the error correction term, "βi" is long-run coefficients, δ incorporates short-run information
Emprical Results Estimation of the long run relation Table 7. Results of long-run estimations
Emprical Results Granger Causality Table 8. Panel causality test results
Conclusion • Primary energy is a key factor that drives GDP growth: its long-run output elasticity evolved around 0.6. • Capital accumulation has played a minor role compared to energy: long-run elasticity for capital around 0.2. • These estimations are also robust to the choice of various sub periods of time and subsamples of countries. • There are good reasons to believe that, the output elasticity of energy is decoupled from its GDP share. • Our inquiry does not suggest that energy use be the sole first-order factor driving growth. Efficiency plays a dual, almost comparable role. • Energy and GDP cointegrateand energy use univocally Granger causes GDP in the long-run