4.7 Article

Does directed technological change favor energy? Firm-level evidence from Portugal

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 98, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105248

Keywords

Directed technological change; Energy; Economic growth; Stochastic frontier analysis; D24; L60; O13; O14; O33; Q40

Categories

Funding

  1. ISCTE-IUL
  2. Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia [UIDB/00315/2020]

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The study finds that technological change is not necessarily biased towards energy, but rather towards labor. Different economic subsectors demonstrate varying levels of technical inefficiency, primarily influenced by capital deepening and the proportion of financial income.
Economic performance is closely related with energy consumption, the major part of which still comes from non-renewable sources. While endeavoring to promote renewable energy, policy makers are interested in technolog-ical change that also increases energy efficiency. However, both growth models of directed technological change and microeconomic theories regarding innovation suggest that technological change is not necessarily biased to-wards energy. In order to investigate directed technological change at the micro level, this paper applies stochas-tic frontier analysis to firm data for 32 economic subsectors, with respect to output produced with four inputs: capital, labor, electricity and fuel. Subsectors demonstrate different levels of technical inefficiency, which could be induced by capital deepening and higher share of financial income in total revenue. Output elasticity of labor is generally high among the subsectors, emphasizing labor as the main driver for economic growth. Output elasticity of capital is low overall, although a few subsectors enjoy better marginal returns. In most subsectors, technological change is biased the most towards labor; between electricity and fuel, technological change has fa-vored fuel in more cases. We infer that the market size effect is likely to overwhelm others in deciding the direc-tion of technological change. Thus, policy should include tools in addition to the energy price in order to induce technological change. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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