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引用次数: 51
摘要
我们研究了居民对电力和天然气的需求,使用了近年来(即1997-2007年)全国家庭层面的数据。我们的数据集是截至2008年美国50个最大大都市地区住宅/家庭的混合面板/多年横截面。据我们所知,这是在全国范围内检查家庭住宅能源使用情况的最全面的数据集,包含了最广泛的地理覆盖范围,并且具有最长的纵向成分(每个住宅多达6个观察值)。我们估计电力和天然气需求的静态和动态模型。我们发现,无论是短期还是长期,家庭对能源价格的反应都很强烈。从静态模型中,我们得到了电力需求自身价格弹性在-0.860 ~ -0.667范围内的估计,而天然气需求自身价格弹性在-0.693 ~ -0.566范围内。这些结果经得起各种检验。与早期文献相反(Metcalf and Hassett, 1999;Reiss和White, 2005),我们发现没有证据表明使用电和燃气供暖的家庭之间的弹性有显著差异。电力需求的价格弹性随收入的增加而下降,但这种影响的幅度很小。这些结果与许多关于美国住宅能源消耗的文献以及当前政府机构实践中使用的数据形成鲜明对比。我们的研究结果表明,影响能源价格的政策可能比之前所认识到的更有潜力。
Residential Consumption of Gas and Electricity in the US: The Role of Prices and Income
We study residential demand for electricity and gas, working with nationwide household-level data that cover recent years, namely 1997-2007. Our dataset is a mixed panel/multi-year cross-sections of dwellings/households in the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the United States as of 2008. To our knowledge, this is the most comprehensive set of data for examining household residential energy usage at the national level, containing the broadest geographical coverage, and with the longest longitudinal component (up to 6 observations per dwelling). We estimate static and dynamic models of electricity and gas demand. We find strong household response to energy prices, both in the short and long term. From the static models, we get estimates of the own price elasticity of electricity demand in the -0.860 to -0.667 range, while the own price elasticity of gas demand is -0.693 to -0.566. These results are robust to a variety of checks. Contrary to earlier literature (Metcalf and Hassett, 1999; Reiss and White, 2005), we find no evidence of significantly different elasticities across households with electric and gas heat. The price elasticity of electricity demand declines with income, but the magnitude of this effect is small. These results are in sharp contrast to much of the literature on residential energy consumption in the United States, and with the figures used in current government agency practice. Our results suggest that there might be greater potential for policies which affect energy price than may have been previously appreciated.