2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.econmod.2014.07.038
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Pass-through of oil prices to domestic prices: Evidence from an oil-hungry but oil-poor emerging market

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Cited by 35 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
(22 reference statements)
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“…17 The oil pass-through to CPI inflation increased from zero (pre-IT regime) to 0.003 (post-IT regime). The evidence of an increasing trend in the oil price pass-through is consistent with Dedeoğlu and Kaya (2014) for Turkey, an oil import dependent emerging market. They argued that as oil becomes more important in the overall cost structure, producers becomes more responsive to oil prices.…”
Section: Tables 4 and 5 Here]supporting
confidence: 70%
“…17 The oil pass-through to CPI inflation increased from zero (pre-IT regime) to 0.003 (post-IT regime). The evidence of an increasing trend in the oil price pass-through is consistent with Dedeoğlu and Kaya (2014) for Turkey, an oil import dependent emerging market. They argued that as oil becomes more important in the overall cost structure, producers becomes more responsive to oil prices.…”
Section: Tables 4 and 5 Here]supporting
confidence: 70%
“…Doğan (2013) uses a threshold autoregressive model on manufacturing prices in Turkey and finds that depending on the aggregate demand conditions the pass through can be varied. Arbalı (2003) and Dedeoğlu and Kaya (2014) too, find results supporting the fact that response of prices to exchange rate shocks does not stay the same across time.…”
Section: Exchange Rate Pass-through In Turkey and Related Factorsmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Their results show that pass-through to private manufacturing prices are higher than that of consumer prices. As examples of more recent studies, Dedeoğlu and Kaya (2014) use rolling VAR to assess the change in ERPT to consumer prices over time. Their results are also in line with the studies above.…”
Section: Empirical Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Real variables used in this study are the industrial production index (IPI), automobile production, the import volume index, the export volume index, the Ercan Türkan Consumer Index, the non-agricultural unemployment rate, and the total employment excluding agriculture. The IPI, highly correlated with GDP, is often used as a proxy for GDP when monthly output data are needed for analysis (e.g., Civcir and Akçaglayan, 2010;Bildirici et al, 2011;Dedeoglu and Kaya, 2014). Similarly, a simple method used by practitioners to predict the YoY GDP growth rate in Turkey is to use the YoY quarterly IPI with a certain amount of judgment.…”
Section: The Datasetmentioning
confidence: 99%