Oil Price Volatility, Economic Growth and the Hedging Role of Renewable Energy
This paper investigates the adverse effects of oil price volatility on economic activity and the extent to which countries can hedge against such effects by using renewable energy. By considering the Realized Volatility of oil prices, rather than f...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/09/18260093/oil-price-volatility-economic-growth-hedging-role-renewable-energy http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15829 |
Summary: | This paper investigates the adverse
effects of oil price volatility on economic activity and the
extent to which countries can hedge against such effects by
using renewable energy. By considering the Realized
Volatility of oil prices, rather than following the standard
approach of considering oil price shocks in levels, the
effects of factor price uncertainty on economic activity are
analyzed. Sample countries represent developed and
developing, oil importing and exporting and
service/industry-based economies (United States, Japan,
Germany, South Korea, India, and Malaysia) and thus
complement the standard literature's analysis of
Western OECD countries. In a vector auto-regressive setting,
Granger causality tests, impulse response functions, and
variance decompositions show that oil price volatility has
more-adverse effects in all sample countries than oil price
shocks alone can explain. The paper finds that the
sensitivity to oil price volatility varies widely across
countries and discusses various factors which may determine
the level of sensitivity (such as sectoral composition and
the energy mix). This implies that the standard approach of
solely considering net oil importer-exporter status is not
sufficient. Simulations of volatility shocks in hypothetical
energy mixes (with increased renewable shares) illustrate
the potential economic benefits resulting from efforts to
disconnect the macroeconomy from volatile commodity markets.
It is concluded that expanding renewable energy can in
principle reduce an economy's vulnerability to oil
price volatility, but a country-specific analysis would be
necessary to identify concrete policy measures. Overall, the
paper provides an additional rationale for reducing exposure
and vulnerability to oil price volatility for the sake of
economic growth. |
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