Item type:Article, Open Access

Oil Price Shocks and Unemployment Rate: New Evidence from the MENA Region

Abstract

We examine the effects of oil price shocks on unemployment rates in the MENA oil-exporting and oil-importing countries over the period 1991-2017. Using the nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag (NARDL) model, the results show that in the short-run, the positive changes of oil prices only exert a positive (increasing) impact on the unemployment rate for oil-exporting countries. However, in the long-run, positive changes in oil prices have a significant increasing effect on the unemployment rate for oil-exporting and oil-importing countries in the MENA region. We also find that the negative changes in oil prices do not show a significant effect on the unemployment rate. Our findings are in line with predictions of the Dutch disease hypothesis.

Metadata

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Cheratian, Iman; Farzanegan, Mohammad Reza; Goltabar, Saleh: Oil Price Shocks and Unemployment Rate: New Evidence from the MENA Region. In: , Jg. (2024-01-19), . DOI: https://doi.org/10.17192/es2024.0626.

License

This item has been published with the following license: In Copyright