Abstract

The effects of oil price volatility on the responses of gasoline prices to oil price shocks have received little attention in discussions on the relationship between the prices of crude oil and gasoline. In this paper we consider such effects by using a bivariate structural vector autoregression which is modified to accommodate GARCH-in-mean errors. Our measure of oil price volatility is the conditional variance of the oil price–change forecast error. We isolate the effects of volatility in the price of oil on the price of gasoline and employ simulation methods to calculate nonlinear impulse response functions (NIRFs) to trace any asymmetric effects of independent oil price shocks on the conditional means of gasoline prices. We test whether the relationship between the prices of crude oil and gasoline is symmetric using tests of the null hypothesis of symmetric impulse responses. Based on monthly U.S. data over the period from 1978:1 to 2014:11, our empirical results show that gasoline prices respond asymmetrically to positive and negative oil price shocks. We also find that oil price volatility has a positive effect on the price of gasoline and it contributes to the asymmetries in the transmission of oil price shocks.

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