On the Sources and Consequences of Oil Price Shocks: the Role of Storage

WP/12/270

Building on recent work on the role of speculation and inventories in oil markets, we embed a competitive oil storage model within a DSGE model of the U.S. economy. This enables us to formally analyze the impact of a (speculative) storage demand shock and to assess how the effects of various demand and supply shocks change in the presence of oil storage facility. We find that business-cycle driven oil demand shocks are the most important drivers of U.S. oil price fluctuations during 1982-2007. Disregarding the storage facility in the model causes a considerable upward bias in the estimated role of oil supply shocks in driving oil price fluctuations. Our results also confirm that a change in the composition of shocks helps explain the resilience of the macroeconomic environment to the oil price surge after 2003. Finally, speculative storage is shown to have a mitigating or amplifying role depending on the nature of the shock.
Publication date: November 2012
ISBN: 9781475586367
$18.00
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Topics covered in this book

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Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics / General , International - Economics , oil storage , oil price fluctuations , oil demand and oil supply shocks speculative oil demand , sticky-price DSGE model

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