The impact of oil prices on macroeconomic fundamentals, monetary policy and stock market for eight Middle East and North African countries
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Topics in Middle Eastern and African Economies
Abstract
The objective of this study is to investigate the impact of oil prices on macroeconomic
fundamentals as well as monetary policy and stock market for eight oil-exporting and non-oil
exports countries in the Middle East and North African region, namely Algeria, Egypt, Iran,
Kuwait, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Turkey. Using quarterly data for the period
1994Q4-2015Q2, with a Panel-ARDL, we may conclude that there are short run dynamic crosssection relationships between, first, oil prices and macroeconomic variables such as growth rate
and consumer price index, second, oil prices and money market rate and, third, market
capitalization and oil prices.
In the long run, dependent variables such as consumer price index and market stock
exhibit a cointegration relationship with oil prices. However, no cointegration relationships
could be established between oil price variations, monetary policy and growth rate. In this
context, we apply a multivariate VAR model to examine responses of all variables to oil price
shocks. Results show a relatively high elastic response of economic growth in oil-exporting
countries except for Kuwait and, conversely, in oil-importing economics, GDP response to oil
prices appear reasonably stable, close to zero.
Similarly, the same results can be captured for each oil-importing and exporting country
as far as the negative sign exhibited by market response to oil price during the first period
caused by financial crisis contagion.
The next macroeconomic variable, CPI, shows a positive response to oil .In addition, oil
prices appear to have a negligible response on money market rates in the Middle East and North
Africa except for Turkey and Egypt.
