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Exogenous oil shocks and the fiscal policy response in oil-exporting countries: evidence from Libya

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posted on 2024-11-14, 05:02 authored by Issa Saleh Ali, Charles Harvie
The downtrend in oil prices beginning in 2014 represents a challenge for small­open developing and exporting economies like Libya. This stems from the importance of government revenue generated from the natural resource sector in financing government consumption and investment expenditures as well as capital imports. The dependency on the natural resource sector and a relatively weak non-natural-resource tax base renders fiscal positions highly challenging in oil­ exporting countries. As more than 90 percent of Libya's government revenue is generated from the oil sector, the budget components are the most influenced by oil-related shocks. Transitory oil price increases, especially after 2000, brought

History

Citation

Ali, I. & Harvie, C. (2017). Exogenous oil shocks and the fiscal policy response in oil-exporting countries: evidence from Libya. Journal of Energy and Development, 42 (1-2), 67-87.

Journal title

Journal of Energy and Development

Volume

42

Issue

1

Pagination

67-87

Language

English

RIS ID

116389

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