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Articles

Road transport energy demand in West Africa: a test of the consumer-tolerable price hypothesis

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Pages 919-940 | Received 26 May 2017, Accepted 10 Oct 2017, Published online: 08 Nov 2017
 

ABSTRACT

This study estimates road transport energy demand (both aggregate energy fuel and gasoline energy fuel) in West Africa using the Pooled Mean Group Estimate and the Panel FMOLS. Primarily, we test for the nonlinearity in the price effects (hereafter referred to as the consumer-tolerable price hypothesis), which is motivated by Adom (2017. “The long-run Price Sensitivity Dynamics of Industrial and Residential Electricity Demand: The Impact of Deregulating Electricity Prices” Energy Economics 62: 43–60). First, for the baseline model, we find that, in the long-run, the energy conservation potency of pricing tools is restrained due to the presence of a rebound effect. Similar result is obtained in the short-run with evidence of cross-sectional differences. Second, in the long-run, we find that the demand–price relation is an inverted U-shaped, but we could only confirm this for Nigeria and Ghana; this suggests that, in the long-run, price disincentive tools have to be higher than a required price threshold in order to induce energy conservation behaviours in these economies.

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Acknowledgement

We thank an anonymous reviewer and the editor for their constructive comments which has helped improved the earlier version of this paper. The usual disclaimer applies.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. Envisages a world where pure market forces prevail to create a climate free open global concentration (World Energy Council Citation2011).

2. Describes a more regulated world where governments decide to intervene in markets to promote technological solutions and infrastructural development that put common interests at the forefront (World Energy Council Citation2011).

3. Computed by price elasticity * (increase in price/weighted price average).

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