Higher world oil prices in the past decade have caused serious economic disruptions in most developing countries, which as a group are highly dependent on imported oil in relation to both the sizes of their economies and their total imports. I Increased oil bills have frequently led to lower aggregate growth rates, more severe balance-of-payments and debt problems, disruptions in energy-using sectors, and domestic inflation. Whether or not world oil prices resume their upward spiral, the oil-importing developing countries will continue to face serious macroeconomic adjustment problems related in one way or another to energy.
Conventional oil is the low cost energy provider for a significant percentage of the world’s energy ...
The global “great recession” was precipitated in part by record high prices of oil and other commodi...
This paper examines the cointegrating relationship between oil demand and price elasticity of energy...
Since 1973 the global economy has been going through a difficult transition period. After a long per...
Recently, it is observed that current account surplus in oil exporting countries have been rising wi...
Jordan is one the world\u27s most dependent countries in foreign sources for energy production in th...
Global economies seem on their way to recovery after the recent downturn. However, one dilemma...
There is a widespread consensus that the sharp fall in the price of oil between 2014 and 2016 has ha...
Like no other region, energy resources have shaped the Arab world and its modern-day development tra...
Energy is the lifeline for the whole of the service and industry sector in any country. Any imbalanc...
The increase in oil prices has put pressure on the global economy. Even economies that have a high d...
This study represents the first econometric study that has attempted to model energy demand exclusiv...
Jordan has a substantial dependence on foreign energy sources with 96% of its needs served by import...
The current wave of volatile international oil process coupled with the low hydro-energy generation ...
Oil is of great importance for the Malaysian and Indonesian economies. It is extremely difficult to ...
Conventional oil is the low cost energy provider for a significant percentage of the world’s energy ...
The global “great recession” was precipitated in part by record high prices of oil and other commodi...
This paper examines the cointegrating relationship between oil demand and price elasticity of energy...
Since 1973 the global economy has been going through a difficult transition period. After a long per...
Recently, it is observed that current account surplus in oil exporting countries have been rising wi...
Jordan is one the world\u27s most dependent countries in foreign sources for energy production in th...
Global economies seem on their way to recovery after the recent downturn. However, one dilemma...
There is a widespread consensus that the sharp fall in the price of oil between 2014 and 2016 has ha...
Like no other region, energy resources have shaped the Arab world and its modern-day development tra...
Energy is the lifeline for the whole of the service and industry sector in any country. Any imbalanc...
The increase in oil prices has put pressure on the global economy. Even economies that have a high d...
This study represents the first econometric study that has attempted to model energy demand exclusiv...
Jordan has a substantial dependence on foreign energy sources with 96% of its needs served by import...
The current wave of volatile international oil process coupled with the low hydro-energy generation ...
Oil is of great importance for the Malaysian and Indonesian economies. It is extremely difficult to ...
Conventional oil is the low cost energy provider for a significant percentage of the world’s energy ...
The global “great recession” was precipitated in part by record high prices of oil and other commodi...
This paper examines the cointegrating relationship between oil demand and price elasticity of energy...