Energy Substitutability in Canadian Manufacturing Econometric Estimation with Bootstrap Confidence Intervals
Yazid Dissou and
Reza Ghazal
The Energy Journal, 2010, vol. Volume 31, issue Number 1, 121-148
Abstract:
This study provides estimates of the price and Morishima substitution elasticities between energy and non-energy inputs in two Canadian energy-intensive manufacturing industries: Primary Metal and Cement. The elasticities are estimated using annual industry-level KLEM data (1961-2003) and relying on two flexible functional forms: the Translog and the Symmetric Generalized McFadden (SGM) cost functions. In addition to the point estimates, the confidence intervals of the elasticities are computed using Studentized bootstrap resampling techniques. For both industries, the estimation results suggest that capital, labour, material and energy are pairwise substitutes and that energy is the most substitutable input. However, the low magnitudes of the estimated elasticities do not seem to offer great flex
JEL-codes: F0 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010
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Journal Article: Energy Substitutability in Canadian Manufacturing Econometric Estimation with Bootstrap Confidence Intervals (2010) 
Working Paper: Energy Substitutability in Canadian Manufacturing: Econometric Estimation with Bootstrap Confidence Intervals (2009) 
Working Paper: Energy Substitutability in Canadian Manufacturing: Econometric Estimation with Bootstrap Confidence Intervals (2008) 
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