Oil Price: The nature of the Shocks and the Impact on the French Economy
Jean-Baptiste Bernard () and
Guillaume Cleaud ()
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Jean-Baptiste Bernard: INSEE
Guillaume Cleaud: CREST
No 2013-29, Working Papers from Center for Research in Economics and Statistics
Abstract:
Since the late 70s and the first two oil shocks, many economic studies have explored the link between changes in oil prices and global economic growth. However, the causes of the variations in oil price have changed over this period. Thus the impact of these shocks on the economy may also differ. Developing a structural VAR model and the bootstrap-after-bootstrap methodology, this paper offers to identify three types of exogenous shocks to explain the dynamic of the real price of oil. This study then analyzes the impact on the French economy of these three shocks by identifying the channels through which these effects transit with a VARX model integrating data on exports and interest rates. We find that the effects of an increase in the real price of oil, and the channels through which it affects the French economy, greatly differ depending on the nature of the shocks. The 80s were mostly dominated by oil supply shocks. Restricting oil production results in a significant decrease in the French Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The shock of the late 2000s can be explained by the development of global activity and the high demand for oil in emerging economies. A positive global activity shock causes a significant increase in French GDP, while the general price level is not impacted by the increase in oil prices
Keywords: real price of oil; SVAR; historical decomposition; bootstrap-after-bootstrap; transmission channels (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: E32 Q41 Q43 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 25
Date: 2013
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