Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing Countries

This paper explores inflation drivers in 12 oil-importing developing economies, focusing on domestic and external drivers, such as monetary policy rate, government expenditure, global oil prices, exchange rate, imports, global food prices, and other factors. The study aims to establish a hierarc...

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Main Author: Younes Ait Hmadouch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EconJournals 2024-12-01
Series:International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://econjournals.com./index.php/ijeep/article/view/17763
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author Younes Ait Hmadouch
author_facet Younes Ait Hmadouch
author_sort Younes Ait Hmadouch
collection DOAJ
description This paper explores inflation drivers in 12 oil-importing developing economies, focusing on domestic and external drivers, such as monetary policy rate, government expenditure, global oil prices, exchange rate, imports, global food prices, and other factors. The study aims to establish a hierarchy of these drivers from the most to the least significant, which is essential for a better implementation of anti-inflationary policies in oil-importing developing countries. Using Seemingly Unrelated Regression (SUR) model and second-generation panel unit root test to handle cross-sectional dependence, and applying Dumitrescu-Hurlin panel Granger causality approach to confirm SUR outcomes, this research paper revealed for the period between 2000Q1, and 2023Q2 that lagged inflation is the most important driver of current inflation, supporting the theoretical concept of inertial inflation. Unexpectedly, this study showed that monetary policy rate is positively impacting inflation, confirming the presence of the price puzzle. Additionally, monetary base doesn’t have any significant impact on aggregate price level, meaning that the inflation is not a monetary phenomenon for the studied countries. Producer prices, used as a proxy for domestic supply shocks, seemed to have a positive and significant effect on inflation. Government expenditure, trade openness, and global oil prices have notable effects. Even if all the studied countries are oil importers, the impact of oil prices on inflation is mitigated by subsidies and price controls. Finally, inflation is negatively affected by imports and exchange rate. The study underscores the necessity for new central bank tools adapted to these countries context, monetary and fiscal policies coordination, a strategic use of subsidies, and an integrated policy to improve market competition.
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spelling doaj-art-522e29a5f84c4da1893c329d4011229d2024-12-23T01:04:00ZengEconJournalsInternational Journal of Energy Economics and Policy2146-45532024-12-0115110.32479/ijeep.17763Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing CountriesYounes Ait Hmadouch0Ibn-Tofail University, Kenitra, Morocco This paper explores inflation drivers in 12 oil-importing developing economies, focusing on domestic and external drivers, such as monetary policy rate, government expenditure, global oil prices, exchange rate, imports, global food prices, and other factors. The study aims to establish a hierarchy of these drivers from the most to the least significant, which is essential for a better implementation of anti-inflationary policies in oil-importing developing countries. Using Seemingly Unrelated Regression (SUR) model and second-generation panel unit root test to handle cross-sectional dependence, and applying Dumitrescu-Hurlin panel Granger causality approach to confirm SUR outcomes, this research paper revealed for the period between 2000Q1, and 2023Q2 that lagged inflation is the most important driver of current inflation, supporting the theoretical concept of inertial inflation. Unexpectedly, this study showed that monetary policy rate is positively impacting inflation, confirming the presence of the price puzzle. Additionally, monetary base doesn’t have any significant impact on aggregate price level, meaning that the inflation is not a monetary phenomenon for the studied countries. Producer prices, used as a proxy for domestic supply shocks, seemed to have a positive and significant effect on inflation. Government expenditure, trade openness, and global oil prices have notable effects. Even if all the studied countries are oil importers, the impact of oil prices on inflation is mitigated by subsidies and price controls. Finally, inflation is negatively affected by imports and exchange rate. The study underscores the necessity for new central bank tools adapted to these countries context, monetary and fiscal policies coordination, a strategic use of subsidies, and an integrated policy to improve market competition. https://econjournals.com./index.php/ijeep/article/view/17763Inflation Drivers, Oil-importing Developing Countries, Dumitrescu and Hurlin Panel Causality, Monetary Policy, Oil Prices
spellingShingle Younes Ait Hmadouch
Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing Countries
International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy
Inflation Drivers, Oil-importing Developing Countries, Dumitrescu and Hurlin Panel Causality, Monetary Policy, Oil Prices
title Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing Countries
title_full Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing Countries
title_fullStr Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing Countries
title_full_unstemmed Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing Countries
title_short Domestic and External Drivers of Inflation in Oil Importing Developing Countries
title_sort domestic and external drivers of inflation in oil importing developing countries
topic Inflation Drivers, Oil-importing Developing Countries, Dumitrescu and Hurlin Panel Causality, Monetary Policy, Oil Prices
url https://econjournals.com./index.php/ijeep/article/view/17763
work_keys_str_mv AT younesaithmadouch domesticandexternaldriversofinflationinoilimportingdevelopingcountries