2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2017.10.005
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Can Private Vehicle-augmenting Technical Progress Reduce Household and Total Fuel Use?

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Overall, we consider the lack of a well-functioning market to be a moderate-level risk, but the impact could be signi cant if the effects of behaviour change programmes are not sustained or not scalable. Macroeconomic modelling (Figus et al, 2018) suggests that reductions in fossil fuel use for private transport will not be achieved through technical e ciency improvements, but probably require either travel mode switching or wholesale substitution of fossil fuel by renewables. The three high-level risks are optimism bias arising in the innovation category, changing policy and regulatory framework occurring in the political category, and operational failure in the technical category.…”
Section: Stages 2-3: Nine Moderate-level Risksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, we consider the lack of a well-functioning market to be a moderate-level risk, but the impact could be signi cant if the effects of behaviour change programmes are not sustained or not scalable. Macroeconomic modelling (Figus et al, 2018) suggests that reductions in fossil fuel use for private transport will not be achieved through technical e ciency improvements, but probably require either travel mode switching or wholesale substitution of fossil fuel by renewables. The three high-level risks are optimism bias arising in the innovation category, changing policy and regulatory framework occurring in the political category, and operational failure in the technical category.…”
Section: Stages 2-3: Nine Moderate-level Risksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In equation (3), Γ p and Γ l are the elasticities of energy in production and employment, both with respect to a change in labour efficiency. Using results given in Figus et al [25], these input-use elasticities can be expressed as functions of the elasticity of demand for the product (η), the elasticity International Journal of Energy Research of substitution between labour and energy in production (σ), and the share of labour in production (s):…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(3) Revised models assumed perfect competition, except Figus et al [2017b], Figus et al [2018]. For (4) and (5), mobile representation of capital between national sectors, investments, and labor increase gradually.…”
Section: Macroeconomic Simulation Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For (4) and (5), mobile representation of capital between national sectors, investments, and labor increase gradually. (6) Recent models are not only dynamic, such that they capture consumer's responsiveness [Figus et al, 2017b], [Figus et al, 2018] [Chang et al, 2018], [Bye et al, 2018], [Duarte et al, 2018], including consumer response to price changes in time, but are also regional-specific (or spatial CGE models) [Helgesen et al, 2018]. (7) To represent energy and non-energy goods, CES/Cobb douglas functions are commonly used and inputs in the energy sector are usually modeled as Leontief composites, with no possibility of substitution, in RE studies assessed in this overview.…”
Section: Macroeconomic Simulation Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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