Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1733075 Energy 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The degrees of grey correlations between oil consumption and output values of the three types of industries have declined.•The long-run elasticity of total oil consumption with respect to the output value of the tertiary industries ranked first.•Although the short-term impacts are limited, China's oil consumption growth shows continuity and inertia.•The output values of the three types of industries Granger cause total oil consumption only in the long run.

The relationships between industrial structure and the respective growth paths of oil consumption of the primary, secondary, and tertiary industries in China are examined. Based on the results, the degrees of grey correlations between total oil consumption and output values of the primary and secondary industries in China have declined, whereas that between Chinese oil consumption and output values of tertiary industries has increased. Using the VECM (vector-error correction model), the long and short run relationships between oil consumption and the three types of industries are identified. From 1978 to 2009, the long-run elasticity of total oil consumption with respect to the output value of tertiary industries ranked first, followed by the secondary industries. The negative effects of the primary industries on total oil consumption result from the "crowding out effects" of the two other industries. Although the error correction coefficients are small, the short-term impacts of the inhibition of oil consumption are limited, and China's oil consumption growth shows strong continuity and inertia. Causal tests and cointegration show that output values of the three types of industries Granger cause total oil consumption in the long run but not in the short run.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy (General)
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