An Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago

Energy revenues represent roughly 45 percent of Trinidad and Tobago's GDP and are highly volatile since they are correlated with the price of oil and gas. Hence, sharp changes in energy prices, whether temporary or sustained, can have important consequences for economic growth and overall macroeconomic performance. After the 2014 crash in oil prices, a key challenge that emerged for policymakers in hydrocarbon-exporting countries is how to manage fiscal retrenchment in an environment of subdued growth. Using structural vector autoregression, this article examines three questions related to this challenge by focusing on Trinidad and Tobago: (1) what is the asymmetric effect of energy revenue shocks on macroeconomic performance, (2) what is the asymmetric effect of energy revenue shocks on government expenditure (disaggregated by categories), and (3) what is the effect of government expenditure shocks (disaggregated by categories) on economic growth. The results suggest that although positive energy revenue shock increases growth almost immediately, it is not sustained. A negative energy revenue shock is found to have a greater adverse effect on primary expenditure than a positive shock and this largely occurs through a reduction in capital expenditure. Transfers and subsidies, and goods and services are the most sensitive components of current expenditure to positive energy shocks. With respect to the effect of expenditure on growth, transfers and subsidies significantly reduce growth in the short run, whereas other categories of expenditure are found to have a largely positive effect on growth. These findings suggest three important implications for policymakers: the first is to reduce and or reorient public expenditure away from transfers and subsidies and towards more growth-enhancing areas; the second is the need for clear fiscal rules, and to more effectively balance the role of fiscal policy as a growth stimulus while also performing other social functions; and thirdly, these results bring into sharp focus the effectiveness of the rules of the country's stabilization fund to manage windfall energy revenues.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inter-American Development Bank
Other Authors: Jeetendra Khadan
Format: Working Papers biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Inter-American Development Bank
Subjects:GDP Growth, Oil Price, Exchange Rate, Macroeconomy, Economic Impact, E32 - Business Fluctuations • Cycles, E37 - Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications, Q33 - Resource Booms, oil prices;economic growth,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011776
https://publications.iadb.org/en/econometric-analysis-energy-revenue-and-government-expenditure-shocks-economic-growth-trinidad-and
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spelling dig-bid-node-126262024-05-30T20:30:06ZAn Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago 2016-12-19T00:00:00+0000 http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011776 https://publications.iadb.org/en/econometric-analysis-energy-revenue-and-government-expenditure-shocks-economic-growth-trinidad-and Inter-American Development Bank GDP Growth Oil Price Exchange Rate Macroeconomy Economic Impact E32 - Business Fluctuations • Cycles E37 - Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications Q33 - Resource Booms oil prices;economic growth Energy revenues represent roughly 45 percent of Trinidad and Tobago's GDP and are highly volatile since they are correlated with the price of oil and gas. Hence, sharp changes in energy prices, whether temporary or sustained, can have important consequences for economic growth and overall macroeconomic performance. After the 2014 crash in oil prices, a key challenge that emerged for policymakers in hydrocarbon-exporting countries is how to manage fiscal retrenchment in an environment of subdued growth. Using structural vector autoregression, this article examines three questions related to this challenge by focusing on Trinidad and Tobago: (1) what is the asymmetric effect of energy revenue shocks on macroeconomic performance, (2) what is the asymmetric effect of energy revenue shocks on government expenditure (disaggregated by categories), and (3) what is the effect of government expenditure shocks (disaggregated by categories) on economic growth. The results suggest that although positive energy revenue shock increases growth almost immediately, it is not sustained. A negative energy revenue shock is found to have a greater adverse effect on primary expenditure than a positive shock and this largely occurs through a reduction in capital expenditure. Transfers and subsidies, and goods and services are the most sensitive components of current expenditure to positive energy shocks. With respect to the effect of expenditure on growth, transfers and subsidies significantly reduce growth in the short run, whereas other categories of expenditure are found to have a largely positive effect on growth. These findings suggest three important implications for policymakers: the first is to reduce and or reorient public expenditure away from transfers and subsidies and towards more growth-enhancing areas; the second is the need for clear fiscal rules, and to more effectively balance the role of fiscal policy as a growth stimulus while also performing other social functions; and thirdly, these results bring into sharp focus the effectiveness of the rules of the country's stabilization fund to manage windfall energy revenues. Inter-American Development Bank Jeetendra Khadan Working Papers application/pdf IDB Publications Trinidad and Tobago en
institution BID
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-bid
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca Felipe Herrera del BID
language English
topic GDP Growth
Oil Price
Exchange Rate
Macroeconomy
Economic Impact
E32 - Business Fluctuations • Cycles
E37 - Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications
Q33 - Resource Booms
oil prices;economic growth
GDP Growth
Oil Price
Exchange Rate
Macroeconomy
Economic Impact
E32 - Business Fluctuations • Cycles
E37 - Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications
Q33 - Resource Booms
oil prices;economic growth
spellingShingle GDP Growth
Oil Price
Exchange Rate
Macroeconomy
Economic Impact
E32 - Business Fluctuations • Cycles
E37 - Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications
Q33 - Resource Booms
oil prices;economic growth
GDP Growth
Oil Price
Exchange Rate
Macroeconomy
Economic Impact
E32 - Business Fluctuations • Cycles
E37 - Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications
Q33 - Resource Booms
oil prices;economic growth
Inter-American Development Bank
An Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago
description Energy revenues represent roughly 45 percent of Trinidad and Tobago's GDP and are highly volatile since they are correlated with the price of oil and gas. Hence, sharp changes in energy prices, whether temporary or sustained, can have important consequences for economic growth and overall macroeconomic performance. After the 2014 crash in oil prices, a key challenge that emerged for policymakers in hydrocarbon-exporting countries is how to manage fiscal retrenchment in an environment of subdued growth. Using structural vector autoregression, this article examines three questions related to this challenge by focusing on Trinidad and Tobago: (1) what is the asymmetric effect of energy revenue shocks on macroeconomic performance, (2) what is the asymmetric effect of energy revenue shocks on government expenditure (disaggregated by categories), and (3) what is the effect of government expenditure shocks (disaggregated by categories) on economic growth. The results suggest that although positive energy revenue shock increases growth almost immediately, it is not sustained. A negative energy revenue shock is found to have a greater adverse effect on primary expenditure than a positive shock and this largely occurs through a reduction in capital expenditure. Transfers and subsidies, and goods and services are the most sensitive components of current expenditure to positive energy shocks. With respect to the effect of expenditure on growth, transfers and subsidies significantly reduce growth in the short run, whereas other categories of expenditure are found to have a largely positive effect on growth. These findings suggest three important implications for policymakers: the first is to reduce and or reorient public expenditure away from transfers and subsidies and towards more growth-enhancing areas; the second is the need for clear fiscal rules, and to more effectively balance the role of fiscal policy as a growth stimulus while also performing other social functions; and thirdly, these results bring into sharp focus the effectiveness of the rules of the country's stabilization fund to manage windfall energy revenues.
author2 Jeetendra Khadan
author_facet Jeetendra Khadan
Inter-American Development Bank
format Working Papers
topic_facet GDP Growth
Oil Price
Exchange Rate
Macroeconomy
Economic Impact
E32 - Business Fluctuations • Cycles
E37 - Forecasting and Simulation: Models and Applications
Q33 - Resource Booms
oil prices;economic growth
author Inter-American Development Bank
author_sort Inter-American Development Bank
title An Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago
title_short An Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago
title_full An Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago
title_fullStr An Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago
title_full_unstemmed An Econometric Analysis of Energy Revenue and Government Expenditure Shocks on Economic Growth in Trinidad and Tobago
title_sort econometric analysis of energy revenue and government expenditure shocks on economic growth in trinidad and tobago
publisher Inter-American Development Bank
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0011776
https://publications.iadb.org/en/econometric-analysis-energy-revenue-and-government-expenditure-shocks-economic-growth-trinidad-and
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