Title of article
The macroeconomic effects of oil price fluctuations on a small open oil-producing country: The case of Trinidad and Tobago
Author/Authors
Troy Lorde، نويسنده , , Mahalia Jackman، نويسنده , , Chrystol Thomas، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
9
From page
2708
To page
2716
Abstract
Using vector autoregressive (VAR) methodology, this paper empirically investigates the macroeconomic effects of oil price fluctuations on Trinidad and Tobago. Overall, we find that the price of oil is a major determinant of economic activity of the country. Our impulse response functions suggest that following a positive oil price shock, output falls within the first two years followed by positive and growing response. We also investigate the macroeconomic impact of oil price volatility. Results suggest that an unanticipated shock to oil price volatility brings about random swings in the macroeconomy; however, only government revenue and the price level exhibit significant responses. With regard to the magnitude of the responses, shocks to oil price volatility tend to yield smaller macroeconomic impacts in comparison to shocks to oil prices. Variance decompositions suggest that the price of oil is a major component of forecast variation for most macroeconomic variables. Finally, Granger-causality tests indicate causality from oil prices to output and oil prices to government revenue.
Keywords
Innovation accounting , Trinidad and Tobago , Oil price fluctuations
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
972721
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