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Comparing the effects of the second OPEC oil price shock on income and resource allocation in four oil-poor developing economies: Ivory Coast, Kenya, South Korea, Turkey

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  • Dick, Hermann
  • Gupta, Sanjeev
  • Vincent, David P.
  • Voigt, Herbert

Abstract

The large OPEC-engineered real world oil price increases of the early and late 1970's have set in train, via a highly integrated international trade and finance system, significant resource transfers from energy-poor to energy-rich countries. In accommodating these resource transfers both energy exporting and importing economies have been confronted with adjustment pressures. In the case of the former group, these adjustment pressures have arisen from the need for these economies to accommodate a favourable shift in their foreign terms of trade, ostensibly by way of a redirection of resources from the international to the domestic account, thus permitting higher real national income. For energy-poor countries however the required adjustment process has much less palatable consequences for economic growth and the real income aspirations of the populations. Our concern in this paper is with a subset of the latter group - the so-called oil-poor developing countries. We focus in considerable detail on four such economies; Kenya, South Korea, Ivory Coast and Turkey. As well as representing various levels of oil 'poorness' these countries exhibit interesting differences in resource endowments, the industrial composition of their gross domestic products, the oil intensity of their industrial production technologies, the skill composition of their labour forces, their openness to world trade and their commodity composition of exports and imports. By means of multisectoral economy-wide models for each of these countries, we quantify the nature and extent of the adjustment pressures imposed on them by what has now become known as the second OPEC oil shock of 1978-80.

Suggested Citation

  • Dick, Hermann & Gupta, Sanjeev & Vincent, David P. & Voigt, Herbert, 1981. "Comparing the effects of the second OPEC oil price shock on income and resource allocation in four oil-poor developing economies: Ivory Coast, Kenya, South Korea, Turkey," Kiel Working Papers 123, Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel).
  • Handle: RePEc:zbw:ifwkwp:123
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    1. Vincent, David P & Dixon, Peter B & Powell, Alan A, 1980. "The Estimation of Supply Response in Australian Agrucilture: The CRESH/CRETH Production System," International Economic Review, Department of Economics, University of Pennsylvania and Osaka University Institute of Social and Economic Research Association, vol. 21(1), pages 221-242, February.
    2. Nunnenkamp, Peter, 1979. "Negative Weltmarkteinflüsse und Anpassungsreaktionen in Brasilien und Südkorea," Open Access Publications from Kiel Institute for the World Economy 3440, Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel).
    3. Hanoch, Giora, 1971. "CRESH Production Functions," Econometrica, Econometric Society, vol. 39(5), pages 695-712, September.
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    1. Vincent, David P., 1983. "A multicountry, multisector general equilibrium model system with endogenous trade," Kiel Working Papers 174, Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel).
    2. Sanjeev Gupta, 1983. "India and the second OPEC oil price shock — an economy-wide analysis," Review of World Economics (Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv), Springer;Institut für Weltwirtschaft (Kiel Institute for the World Economy), vol. 119(1), pages 122-137, March.

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