This study analyzes the impact of GDP shocks in USA on primary energy consumption and the reverse impact in a comprehensive and novel framework, distinguishing by economic sectors (commercial, industrial, residential and transportation) and energy source, i.e., total fossil (coal, natural gas and petroleum), nuclear, and renewable (hydroelectric, geothermal and biomass) for the period 1973:1 to 2015:2. To this end, we apply Granger causality analysis through the Hatemi-J [1] and Toda and Yamamoto [2] approaches from a time series perspective to evaluate the existence of asymmetries on this bidirectional relationship. The empirical results suggest that the impact of GDP on primary energy consumption is heterogeneous and energy source-specifi...
The aim of this paper is to re-examine the energy-GDP relationship for the US for the period 1946-20...
In recent years the issues of energy consumption and economic development have become the concern of...
The energy consumption-growth nexus has been widely studied in the empirical literature, though res...
This paper explores potential short-term causal relationships between energy consumption and real GD...
The role of energy in the economy is an important issue. There is a general belief and agreement amo...
We study the relationship between energy consumption and real GDP in the USA using a multivariate ti...
Recent debates about renewable energy consumption manifest two main expectations. Firstly, renewabl...
Recent debates about renewable energy consumption manifest two main expectations. Firstly, renewable...
The energy consumption-growth nexus has been widely studied in the empirical literature, though resu...
The rapidly growing literature on the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth ha...
This study is different from previous energy-GDP cointegration/causality ones by examining whether t...
AbstractIn recent years the issues of energy consumption and economic development have become the co...
We investigated Granger-causality in the frequency domain between primary energy consumption/electri...
A growing amount of electricity is produced from renewable sources. For this reason, it is important...
This paper examines the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for the United S...
The aim of this paper is to re-examine the energy-GDP relationship for the US for the period 1946-20...
In recent years the issues of energy consumption and economic development have become the concern of...
The energy consumption-growth nexus has been widely studied in the empirical literature, though res...
This paper explores potential short-term causal relationships between energy consumption and real GD...
The role of energy in the economy is an important issue. There is a general belief and agreement amo...
We study the relationship between energy consumption and real GDP in the USA using a multivariate ti...
Recent debates about renewable energy consumption manifest two main expectations. Firstly, renewabl...
Recent debates about renewable energy consumption manifest two main expectations. Firstly, renewable...
The energy consumption-growth nexus has been widely studied in the empirical literature, though resu...
The rapidly growing literature on the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth ha...
This study is different from previous energy-GDP cointegration/causality ones by examining whether t...
AbstractIn recent years the issues of energy consumption and economic development have become the co...
We investigated Granger-causality in the frequency domain between primary energy consumption/electri...
A growing amount of electricity is produced from renewable sources. For this reason, it is important...
This paper examines the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for the United S...
The aim of this paper is to re-examine the energy-GDP relationship for the US for the period 1946-20...
In recent years the issues of energy consumption and economic development have become the concern of...
The energy consumption-growth nexus has been widely studied in the empirical literature, though res...