Abstract

Research background: The effects of oil price fluctuations on the macroeconomic performance in oil-importing and oil-exporting countries have stimulated considerable research activity. However, the debate is far from being closed.
 Purpose of the article: This paper revisits the impact of crude oil price on economic activity in the Gulf Cooperation Council oil-exporting countries. The study covers a relatively long period spanning from 1960 to 2018.
 Methods: The empirical investigation accounts for structural breaks, nonlinearity, and non-normal ?distribution of data. The Kapetanios (2005) structural breaks unit root test?? and ?Saikkonen?Lütkepohl (2000a, b, c) cointegration test with structural shifts are implemented to examine the stationary properties of data and the presence of cointegration between variables, respectively. Moreover, the quantile regression is employed to assess whether the impact of oil price on real GDP differs across different states of the economy.
 Findings & Value added: Empirical results suggest the absence of long-run cointegrating relationships between oil price and GDP in all countries. The quantile regression reveals that oil price does not affect real GDP in the same way across countries and for different business cycle phases. More specifically, the symmetric quantile regression findings reveal that oil price exerts a positive impact on GDP in all countries and that the effect is higher during the recession than expansion states. The asymmetric quantile regression shows that GDP reacts to positive oil price changes in all countries. However, only the Emirati and Omani GDPs are affected by negative oil price changes.

Highlights

  • During the last decades, the world oil market has been shaken by strong turbulences characterized by sharp oil price fluctuations

  • Results show that real oil price and real GDP of the five GCC oil-exporting countries are integrated of order one

  • Our findings represent a strong argument towards considering asymmetries, they are still driven by the mean effect of oil price on economic growth

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Summary

Introduction

The world oil market has been shaken by strong turbulences characterized by sharp oil price fluctuations. The instability of international oil prices and its impact on macroeconomic performance have become an increasing challenge for economies since it may affect consumers, producers, and governments (Marimoutou et al, 2009). These stylized facts have sparked a considerable research effort dealing with the effects of oil price fluctuations on macroeconomic performance. A review of the existing literature shows that there have been relatively limited studies analyzing the oil price-economic performance relationship in oil-exporting countries (Iwayemi & Fowowe, 2011; Nusair, 2016; Nasir et al, 2019; Charfeddine & Barkat, 2020), which represents a critical gap in the existing literature

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