4.5 Article

The Relationship between Energy Consumption and Economic Growth: Evidence from China's Industrial Sectors

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages 9392-9406

Publisher

MDPI AG
DOI: 10.3390/en8099392

Keywords

energy consumption; economic growth; industrial sectors; panel causality; cross-sectional dependence

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71301160, 71301173, 71471039]
  2. Beijing Planning Office of Philosophy and Social Science [13JGB018]
  3. Program for Innovation Research in Central University of Finance and Economics

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In this article, the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth is examined from the viewpoint of China's industrial sectors. Panel data from 37 industrial sectors in China covering the period from 1998 to 2010 was used in this study. Not only first generation panel unit root tests and panel cointegration tests, but also second generation tests that account for dependence between cross-sectional units were employed. The empirical results reveal that both energy consumption and economic growth are integrated as order one, and they are cointegrated. Panel fully modified ordinary least squares estimators show that a 1% increase in energy consumption increases the real value added of industrial sectors by 0.871%, and a 1% increase in real value added of industrial sectors increases energy consumption by 1.103%. The panel vector error correction models for causality tests are estimated by a system generalized moment method. We find a unidirectional causal relation running from economic growth to energy consumption in the shortrun. In the long run, however, there is evidence of a unidirectional causality running from energy consumption to economic growth.

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