The Effects of Oil Price Changes on the Industry-Level Production and Prices in the U.S. and Japan
Ichiro Fukunaga,
Naohisa Hirakata and
Nao Sudo
No 15791, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
In this paper, we decompose oil price changes into their component parts following Kilian (2009) and estimate the dynamic effects of each component on industry-level production and prices in the U.S. and Japan using identified VAR models. The way oil price changes affect each industry depends on what kind of underlying shock drives oil price changes as well as on industry characteristics. Unexpected disruptions of oil supply act mainly as negative supply shocks for oil-intensive industries and act mainly as negative demand shocks for less oil-intensive industries. For most industries in the U.S., shocks to the global demand for all industrial commodities act mainly as positive demand shocks, and demand shocks that are specific to the global oil market act mainly as negative supply shocks. In Japan, the oil-specific demand shocks as well as the global demand shocks act mainly as positive demand shocks for many industries.
JEL-codes: E30 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010-03
Note: EFG IFM
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (31)
Published as The Effects of Oil Price Changes on the Industry-Level Production and Prices in the United States and Japan , Ichiro Fukunaga, Naohisa Hirakata, Nao Sudo. in Commodity Prices and Markets , Ito and Rose. 2011
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Working Paper: The Effects of Oil Price Changes on the Industry-Level Production and Prices in the U.S. and Japan (2009)
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