2014
DOI: 10.1504/ijse.2014.063186
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Energy consumption and economic activity: an empirical study for G20

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Karanfil and Li (2015) established the long-run relationship between electricity consumption and growth; however, this result is sensitive to regional differences, countries' income levels, urbanization rates and the supply risks. The results of causality are in line with the previous studies by Nasreen and Anwar (2014) Kivyiro and Arminen (2014) in the context of SubSaharan Africa, Wolde-Rufael (2014) in transition countries, Zaidi et al (2014) in G-20 countries, Hwang and Yoo (2014) in Indonesia, Zeb et al (2014) in SAARC countries, Behmiri and Pires Manso (2014) in Latin America, etc.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Karanfil and Li (2015) established the long-run relationship between electricity consumption and growth; however, this result is sensitive to regional differences, countries' income levels, urbanization rates and the supply risks. The results of causality are in line with the previous studies by Nasreen and Anwar (2014) Kivyiro and Arminen (2014) in the context of SubSaharan Africa, Wolde-Rufael (2014) in transition countries, Zaidi et al (2014) in G-20 countries, Hwang and Yoo (2014) in Indonesia, Zeb et al (2014) in SAARC countries, Behmiri and Pires Manso (2014) in Latin America, etc.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Further, Payne (2009) and Bowden and Payne (2010) discovered no causality association for US countries across varied time. Tugcu et al (2012), Al‐mulali et al (2013) and Zaidi et al (2014) provided detailed explanations on the growth‐renewable energy causality association and reported the controversial results across different nations.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first study is the study of Kraft and Kraft (1978) which have analyzed the relationship of energy and growth national product (GNP). After this study, various researchers have investigated the link between energy and economic activity (Akinlo, 2008;Balat, 2008;Balcilar, Ozdemir, & Arslanturk, 2010;Zaidi, Jbir, & Gmidene, 2014). Stern (1993) as ecologic economist believed that energy is the most important growth This paper based on the hypothesis (2) that advances the view that energy consumption promotes economic growth, precisely; the demand of renewable energy consumption propelled with sustainable growth measured by the growth of total factors productivity.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%