UPM Institutional Repository

The impacts of oil export and food production on inflation in African OPEC members


Citation

Bala, Umar and Lee, Chin and Kaliappan, Shivee Ranjanee and Ismail, Normaz Wana (2017) The impacts of oil export and food production on inflation in African OPEC members. International Journal of Economics and Management, 11 (S3). pp. 573-590. ISSN 1823-836X; ESSN: 2600-9390

Abstract

This study examined the long run impact of oil export and food production on inflation in African OPEC member countries. The countries consist Algeria, Angola, Libya and Nigeria. This study applied Pedroni cointegration test. In addition, dynamic panel ARDL models (PMG and MG estimators) were also used. This study found that the long-run coefficient of oil exports, money supply, exchange rate and GDP are positively related to inflation while food production is negatively related to inflation. The policy makers should maintain a certain level of oil export to minimize the rate of inflation, also to encourage domestic food production to reduce the rate of inflation. Besides that, the study also concludes that increase in money supply and depreciation of exchange rate cause inflation rate. Hence, the policy makers can use the contractionary monetary policy as well as currency control to reduce the inflation rate in OPEC member countries.


Download File

[img]
Preview
Text
(1) IJEM (S3) 2017 THE IMPACTS OF OIL EXPORT AND FOOD PRODUCTION ON INFLATION IN AFRICAN OPEC MEMBERS .pdf

Download (1MB) | Preview

Additional Metadata

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Faculty of Economics and Management
Institute of Agricultural and Food Policy Studies
Publisher: Faculty of Economics and Management, Universiti Putra Malaysia
Keywords: Oil export; Food production; Panel ARDL; African countries
Depositing User: Mas Norain Hashim
Date Deposited: 27 Aug 2018 01:20
Last Modified: 06 Sep 2018 02:29
URI: http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/63472
Statistic Details: View Download Statistic

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item