2018
DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2018.1488059
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Is energy consumption sensitive to foreign capital inflows and currency devaluation in Pakistan?

Abstract: This study investigates the relationship between foreign capital inflows and energy consumption by incorporating economic growth, exports and currency devaluation in energy demand function for the case of Pakistan. The long-run and short-run effects are examined via ARDL bounds testing procedure. Foreign capital inflows and currency devaluation (economic growth and exports) decrease (increase) energy consumption in long-run. The results confirm a feedback effect between foreign capital inflows and energy consu… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Contrary to our expectations, the coefficients of exchange rate (LnEX-PKR/USD) are all reported as positive and significant, implying that an increase in exchange rate (rupee depreciation) accelerates energy imports. Ideally, an increase in exchange rate (rupee depreciation) diminishes the domestic energy demand (Shahbaz et al, 2018;Ghoddusi et al, 2019), thereby reducing the energy imports. Since the energy resources in Pakistan diminish and the energy demand grows rapidly, the country has no option but to import energy irrespective of the consequences.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Contrary to our expectations, the coefficients of exchange rate (LnEX-PKR/USD) are all reported as positive and significant, implying that an increase in exchange rate (rupee depreciation) accelerates energy imports. Ideally, an increase in exchange rate (rupee depreciation) diminishes the domestic energy demand (Shahbaz et al, 2018;Ghoddusi et al, 2019), thereby reducing the energy imports. Since the energy resources in Pakistan diminish and the energy demand grows rapidly, the country has no option but to import energy irrespective of the consequences.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Theoretically, the sign associated with β 1 could be either positive or negative since the effect of exchange rate volatility in the literature is inconsistent. The coefficient estimate of β 2 is expected to be negative, since increasing the exchange rate diminishes energy consumption (see Shahbaz et al, 2018;Ghoddusi et al, 2019); therefore, the demand for energy imports declines. The sign of β 3 is expected to be positive, since a higher foreign direct investment expands domestic economic activity, which, in turn, accelerates the energy demand; thus, to meet this increasing energy demand, Pakistan has to import more energy.…”
Section: Methodology Econometric Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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