Stationarity Changes in Long-Run Fossil Resource Prices Evidence from Persistence Break Testing Stationarity Changes in Long-Run Fossil Resource Prices: Evidence from Persistence Break Testing release_me5qru75dfg3hiztwfiygyoocu

by Aleksandar Zaklan, Jan Abrell, Anne Neumann, Aleksandar Zaklan, Jan Abrell, Anne Neumann

Released as a article-journal .

Abstract

This paper considers the question of whether changes in persistence have occurred during the long-run evolution of U.S. prices of the non-renewable energy resources crude oil, natural gas and bituminous coal. Our main contribution is to allow for a structural break when testing for a break in persistence, thus disentangling the effect of a deterministic break from that of a stochastic break and advancing the existing literature on the persistence properties of non-renewable resource prices. The results clearly demonstrate the importance of specifying a structural break when testing for breaks in persistence, whereas our findings are robust to the exact date of the structural break. Our analysis yields that coal and natural gas prices are trend stationary throughout their evolution, while oil prices exhibit a break in persistence during the 1970s. The findings suggest that especially the coal market has remained fundamentals-driven, whereas for the oil market exogenous shocks have become dominant. Thus, our results are consequential for the treatment of energy resource prices in both causal analysis and forecasting. JEL Codes: C12, C22, Q31, Q41
In text/plain format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf  272.0 kB
file_wggw2wq73fd3venqwfgfy35sde
web.archive.org (webarchive)
www.diw.de (web)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   unknown
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: 0eaf2426-9dbc-4673-a0f0-bd2bd7f6aea9
API URL: JSON