Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand

This master thesis attempts to estimate the short-run and long-run price and income elasticities of crude oil demand in ten IEA member-countries for the time period 1980-2009. Specifically, the price and income elasticities for Sweden, Denmark, Spain, Portugal, Turkey, Finland, Italy, Germany, USA,...

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Main Author: Christos, Tsirimokos
Format: Second cycle, A2E
Language:Inglés
Inglés
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3594/
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author Christos, Tsirimokos
author_browse Christos, Tsirimokos
author_facet Christos, Tsirimokos
author_sort Christos, Tsirimokos
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description This master thesis attempts to estimate the short-run and long-run price and income elasticities of crude oil demand in ten IEA member-countries for the time period 1980-2009. Specifically, the price and income elasticities for Sweden, Denmark, Spain, Portugal, Turkey, Finland, Italy, Germany, USA, and Japan are estimated. Crude oil consumption is a function of four explanatory variables: real oil prices, real GDP per capita, oil consumption lagged one year and a time trend representing technological improvements. The econometric model that is used is a multiple regression model derived from an adaption of Nerlove’s partial adjustment model. Empirical results reveal that elasticities (both price and income) are lower in the short-run and hence more inelastic, indicating that countries need time to respond to changes in price or income. Econometric estimations illustrate that oil consumption is highly price inelastic both in short-run and long-run. Income elasticities are more elastic than price elasticities and close to unity in the long-run, indicating that countries are more sensitive to income changes.
format Second cycle, A2E
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
Inglés
publishDate 2011
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spelling RepoSLU35942012-04-20T14:23:39Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3594/ Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand Christos, Tsirimokos Economics and management This master thesis attempts to estimate the short-run and long-run price and income elasticities of crude oil demand in ten IEA member-countries for the time period 1980-2009. Specifically, the price and income elasticities for Sweden, Denmark, Spain, Portugal, Turkey, Finland, Italy, Germany, USA, and Japan are estimated. Crude oil consumption is a function of four explanatory variables: real oil prices, real GDP per capita, oil consumption lagged one year and a time trend representing technological improvements. The econometric model that is used is a multiple regression model derived from an adaption of Nerlove’s partial adjustment model. Empirical results reveal that elasticities (both price and income) are lower in the short-run and hence more inelastic, indicating that countries need time to respond to changes in price or income. Econometric estimations illustrate that oil consumption is highly price inelastic both in short-run and long-run. Income elasticities are more elastic than price elasticities and close to unity in the long-run, indicating that countries are more sensitive to income changes. 2011-11-16 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3594/1/Master%20Thesis.pdf Christos, Tsirimokos, 2011. Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand : the case of ten IEA countries. Second cycle, A2E. Uppsala: (NL, NJ) > Dept. of Economics <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-510.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-769 eng
spellingShingle Economics and management
Christos, Tsirimokos
Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand
title Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand
title_full Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand
title_fullStr Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand
title_full_unstemmed Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand
title_short Price and income elasticities of crude oil demand
title_sort price and income elasticities of crude oil demand
topic Economics and management
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3594/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3594/