Electricity consumption and industrial output: fresh evidence from economic community of West African states (ECOWAS)

IF 1.8 Q2 ECONOMICS
O. G. Onatunji
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Abstract

PurposeThe current wave of decreasing electricity supply to meet the immediate demand of the populace is influencing not only economic growth but also the industrial productivity of the ECOWAS sub-region. In this context, this paper investigates the long-run and causal relationships between electricity consumption and industrial output in selected ECOWAS countries over the period 1971–2017.Design/methodology/approachThe Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) bound testing approach is employed to determine the existence of relationships among the variables. The causal nexus between electricity consumption and industrial output is examined using both the Toda-Yamamoto causality test and the bootstrap-corrected causality technique.FindingsThe long run results indicated that increasing electricity supply enhances industrial output only in Benin, Cote d'Ivoire, Gambia, Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, Senegal, and Sierra Leone. Furthermore, the causality test results confirmed the presence of all four hypotheses in this study, but the two causality tests agree, particularly in the evidence of growth and neutrality hypotheses. In the cases of Benin, Burkina Faso, Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone, a unilateral causality running from electricity consumption to industrial output is found. However, no evidence of causality between electricity consumption and industrial production has been confirmed in Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea Bissau, Liberia and Niger.Practical implicationsThe relevant energy stakeholders in the subregion need to reprioritize their policy framework to focus more on the electricity sector of their economies since electricity consumption is identified as an important driver of industrial growth in the West African countries.Originality/valueThis is the first study to provide a comparative and country-specific investigation of the nexus between electricity consumption and industrial output in Africa, particularly in the West African region.
电力消费和工业产出:来自西非国家经济共同体(ECOWAS)的新证据
目的当前为满足民众迫切需求而减少电力供应的浪潮不仅影响到西非经共体分区域的经济增长,而且影响到工业生产力。在此背景下,本文研究了1971-2017年期间选定的西非经共体国家的电力消耗与工业产出之间的长期因果关系。设计/方法/方法采用自回归分布滞后(ARDL)界检验方法来确定变量之间是否存在关系。电力消费与工业产出之间的因果关系是使用Toda-Yamamoto因果检验和自举校正因果关系技术来检验的。长期研究结果表明,增加电力供应只会提高贝宁、科特迪瓦、冈比亚、几内亚、利比里亚、尼日利亚、塞内加尔和塞拉利昂的工业产出。此外,因果检验结果证实了本研究中所有四个假设的存在,但两个因果检验一致,特别是在增长性假设和中性假设的证据方面。在贝宁、布基纳法索、冈比亚、加纳、尼日利亚和塞拉利昂的案例中,发现了从电力消耗到工业产出的单边因果关系。然而,在科特迪瓦、几内亚比绍、利比里亚和尼日尔,没有证据证实电力消费与工业生产之间存在因果关系。实际影响由于电力消费被认为是西非国家工业增长的重要驱动力,该次区域的相关能源利益攸关方需要重新调整其政策框架的优先顺序,更多地关注其经济的电力部门。原创性/价值这是对非洲,特别是西非区域的电力消费和工业产出之间的关系进行比较和具体国家调查的第一项研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
5.60%
发文量
83
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