Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?

This study empirically evaluates the dynamic effects oil price, income and exchange rate on oil consumption in Algeria, Angola, Nigeria, South Africa, and Tunisia. Specifically, it tries to reveal the differential effects of rising and falling oil prices, economic prosperities and adversaries, as we...

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Main Authors: Uche, Emmanuel, Ihezukwu, Veronica Adaku, Osunkwo, Folusho Olufunke Chinyere, Okoronkwo, Chijioke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2021
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18788/1/jeko_552-5.pdf
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18788/
https://www.ukm.my/jem/issue/v55i2/
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spelling my-ukm.journal.187882022-06-23T08:17:43Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18788/ Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials? Uche, Emmanuel Ihezukwu, Veronica Adaku Osunkwo, Folusho Olufunke Chinyere Okoronkwo, Chijioke This study empirically evaluates the dynamic effects oil price, income and exchange rate on oil consumption in Algeria, Angola, Nigeria, South Africa, and Tunisia. Specifically, it tries to reveal the differential effects of rising and falling oil prices, economic prosperities and adversaries, as well as, exchange rate appreciations and depreciation on oil consumption in the selected countries. The current study relied on monthly data sourced from OPEC and IMF-IFS data banks and analyzed within the Nonlinear ARDL framework. The NARDL model traces asymmetry in macroeconomic relationships by isolating the effects of positive changes from negative changes. The empirical findings reveal that the effects of oil price deviations on oil consumption is asymmetric in the short-run in Angola and Tunisia, and in the long-run in Nigeria. Furthermore, income and exchange rate deviations affect oil consumption asymmetrically in Algeria, Nigeria, South Africa and Tunisia. However, exchange rate deviation does not have an asymmetric effect on oil consumption in Algeria. The overall implication of such asymmetric effects is that positive deviations could not offset negative deviations and vice-versa. Therefore, to guide against general welfare losses, policymakers should take cognizance of such nonlinear and asymmetric effects in their policy moderations. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2021 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18788/1/jeko_552-5.pdf Uche, Emmanuel and Ihezukwu, Veronica Adaku and Osunkwo, Folusho Olufunke Chinyere and Okoronkwo, Chijioke (2021) Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials? Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia, 55 (2). pp. 1-15. ISSN 0127-1962 https://www.ukm.my/jem/issue/v55i2/
institution Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
building Tun Sri Lanang Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
content_source UKM Journal Article Repository
url_provider http://journalarticle.ukm.my/
language English
description This study empirically evaluates the dynamic effects oil price, income and exchange rate on oil consumption in Algeria, Angola, Nigeria, South Africa, and Tunisia. Specifically, it tries to reveal the differential effects of rising and falling oil prices, economic prosperities and adversaries, as well as, exchange rate appreciations and depreciation on oil consumption in the selected countries. The current study relied on monthly data sourced from OPEC and IMF-IFS data banks and analyzed within the Nonlinear ARDL framework. The NARDL model traces asymmetry in macroeconomic relationships by isolating the effects of positive changes from negative changes. The empirical findings reveal that the effects of oil price deviations on oil consumption is asymmetric in the short-run in Angola and Tunisia, and in the long-run in Nigeria. Furthermore, income and exchange rate deviations affect oil consumption asymmetrically in Algeria, Nigeria, South Africa and Tunisia. However, exchange rate deviation does not have an asymmetric effect on oil consumption in Algeria. The overall implication of such asymmetric effects is that positive deviations could not offset negative deviations and vice-versa. Therefore, to guide against general welfare losses, policymakers should take cognizance of such nonlinear and asymmetric effects in their policy moderations.
format Article
author Uche, Emmanuel
Ihezukwu, Veronica Adaku
Osunkwo, Folusho Olufunke Chinyere
Okoronkwo, Chijioke
spellingShingle Uche, Emmanuel
Ihezukwu, Veronica Adaku
Osunkwo, Folusho Olufunke Chinyere
Okoronkwo, Chijioke
Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?
author_facet Uche, Emmanuel
Ihezukwu, Veronica Adaku
Osunkwo, Folusho Olufunke Chinyere
Okoronkwo, Chijioke
author_sort Uche, Emmanuel
title Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?
title_short Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?
title_full Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?
title_fullStr Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?
title_full_unstemmed Does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?
title_sort does oil consumption respond asymmetrically to oil price, exchange rate and income differentials?
publisher Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
publishDate 2021
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18788/1/jeko_552-5.pdf
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/18788/
https://www.ukm.my/jem/issue/v55i2/
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score 13.18916