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Oil price volatility, fiscal policy and economic growth: a panel vector autoregressive ( PVAR ) analysis of some selected oil‐exporting A frican countries
Author(s) -
Omojolaibi Joseph Ayoola,
Egwaikhide Festus O.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
opec energy review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1753-0237
pISSN - 1753-0229
DOI - 10.1111/opec.12018
Subject(s) - economics , volatility (finance) , monetary economics , fiscal policy , real gross domestic product , macroeconomics , gross domestic product , econometrics
Fiscal policy in oil‐centred economies is facing specific challenges, both in the long run, as regards intergenerational equity and fiscal sustainability, and in the short run, as regards macroeconomic stabilisation and fiscal planning. Specifically, fiscal policy in most oil‐exporting countries in A frica has been expansionary over the past years in the wake of high oil prices. Fiscal expansion has added to inflationary pressure, and monetary policy has been constrained in tackling inflation as a result of prevailing exchange rate regimes. The sharp fall in oil prices since mid‐2008 has brought to the fore a different question—whether oil exporters in A frica can sustain spending levels reached in previous years. The study makes use of quarterly data that span between 1990:q1 and 2010:q4. A panel vector autoregressive technique was employed to examine the impact of oil price volatility on economic performance of five oil‐exporting countries in A frica. The countries are A lgeria, A ngola, E gypt, L ibya and N igeria. In order to study the responses of shocks, the study identifies oil price volatility, real gross domestic product (real GDP ), fiscal deficit, gross investment and money supply shocks by ordering the variables in this way and using a standard C holeski factorisation. The impulse response function's result shows that of all the macroeconomic variables considered, gross investment respond more effectively to oil price volatility. However, the responses of fiscal deficit, real GDP and money supply are less effective. Overall, these findings suggest that gross investment is the main route through which volatility in oil price influenced the real sector of these economies.

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