China's remarkable economic progress over the past three decades has been complemented by massive energy consumption. Although coal has long been the primary energy source, the rise in crude oil use has been viewed as more contentious, because a large portion of crude oil is imported, whereas the economy is mostly self-sufficient in coal. We examine the role of R&D effort and self-sufficiency on China's oil import function from 1980 to 2020. Using the autoregressive distributed lag model, we find that the R&D effort raises oil imports in the long run. However, we find oil imports to be independent from self-sufficiency in the long run. We also find that China's accession to the World Trade Organization has significantly changed the cointegr...
This paper evaluates the symmetric and asymmetric relationships between military spending (MS) and o...
Summary: China’s growing demand for oil is significantly changing the international geopolitics of e...
This working paper analyzes three key factors that characterize the “new normal” of China's oil dema...
Recently released figures showing crude oil imports soaring by nearly 40% in the first five months o...
Breaking the highly oil-dependent energy use structure in the transportation sector will be crucial ...
Sustained economic growth in China has triggered a surge of energy imports, especially oil imports. ...
China has constituted the most significant source of the incremental growth in global oil demand ove...
The Chinese economy is in a stage of energy transition: from low efficiency solid fuels to oil, gas,...
This paper examines both the equilibrium relationship and the predictability between oil consumption...
We examine the relationship between Chinese aggregate production and consumption of three main energ...
It is the great issue to secure the energy resources for China which has become the oil-importing co...
China, the most populated state on the planet, has experienced a spectacular economic growth af...
China’s growing demand for oil is significantly changing the international geopolitics of energy, es...
We examine the relationship between Chinese aggregate production and consumption of three main energ...
China's demand for energy has grown to fuel its rapidly expanding industrial, commercial and consume...
This paper evaluates the symmetric and asymmetric relationships between military spending (MS) and o...
Summary: China’s growing demand for oil is significantly changing the international geopolitics of e...
This working paper analyzes three key factors that characterize the “new normal” of China's oil dema...
Recently released figures showing crude oil imports soaring by nearly 40% in the first five months o...
Breaking the highly oil-dependent energy use structure in the transportation sector will be crucial ...
Sustained economic growth in China has triggered a surge of energy imports, especially oil imports. ...
China has constituted the most significant source of the incremental growth in global oil demand ove...
The Chinese economy is in a stage of energy transition: from low efficiency solid fuels to oil, gas,...
This paper examines both the equilibrium relationship and the predictability between oil consumption...
We examine the relationship between Chinese aggregate production and consumption of three main energ...
It is the great issue to secure the energy resources for China which has become the oil-importing co...
China, the most populated state on the planet, has experienced a spectacular economic growth af...
China’s growing demand for oil is significantly changing the international geopolitics of energy, es...
We examine the relationship between Chinese aggregate production and consumption of three main energ...
China's demand for energy has grown to fuel its rapidly expanding industrial, commercial and consume...
This paper evaluates the symmetric and asymmetric relationships between military spending (MS) and o...
Summary: China’s growing demand for oil is significantly changing the international geopolitics of e...
This working paper analyzes three key factors that characterize the “new normal” of China's oil dema...