Abstract

Growing energy demand but stagnant production followed by volatile exchange rate leads Pakistan to energy imbalances and potential economic contraction. Yet, studies on sectoral energy imports are limited and inconclusive without accessing the asymmetric effect of currency fluctuations. We examine the impacts of Pakistani rupee volatility on monthly energy imports based on the nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) estimations. Augmented Dickey–Fuller and Phillips–Perron tests were used to conduct unit root testing, and the bound testing approach was used to examine the long-term cointegration. The long-run asymmetry was tested with the Wald test, and using the NARDL model, we examined both short-run and long-run asymmetric effects of exchange rate volatility on energy imports. The bound test was established and supported through ECMt−1 (t-test), cointegrating the relationship between exchange rate volatility and energy imports in a long term. Among others, both short-run and long-run asymmetric effects were found for crude oil, coal, electricity, and petroleum products. Rupee depreciation increased crude oil and electricity imports, while the appreciation effects were insignificant. Overall, the empirical assessment reveals that the foreign exchange volatility effect is sectoral specific and asymmetric in Pakistan. It offers new insights into re-strategizing the energy policy and refining the import substitution plan.

Highlights

  • Energy is a key driver in sustaining socioeconomic development

  • All the energy imports that are taken as dependent variables are I(1)

  • When the exchange rate system shifted from the fixed to the flexible exchange rate system in 1973, it led to the emergence of a new area of research where studies examined the effect of exchange rate volatility or uncertainty on international trade

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Summary

Introduction

Energy is a key driver in sustaining socioeconomic development. On account of fast industrial and technological development, the demand for energy is expanding very fast especially among the developing Asian economies (World Energy Outlook, WEO, 2018). The International Energy Agency (IEA, 2019) projected that the world energy demand will grow by a quarter by 2040, while the demand in Asia will grow by 40%. Asia makes up half of the energy growth in natural gas, 80% in crude oil, and 100% in coal. This increasing energy demand in Asia is startling as it represents two-third of the world total energy growth (IEA, 2019)

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