Research

Fuel subsidy abolition and performance of the sectors in Malaysia: A computable general equilibrium approach

Fuel subsidy abolition and performance of the sectors in Malaysia: A computable general equilibrium approach

Description

This study examines the effects of global economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on Malaysia's macroeconomic indicators.
This study examines the effects of global economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on Malaysia's macroeconomic indicators. Three substantive findings emerged from our inquiry based on a multivariate generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity (GARCH) model: (1) Domestic uncertainty - in nominal and real terms - seems to have no material impact on the macro-economy after controlling for global uncertainty. (2) Fluctuations in the global EPU are more important than domestic uncertainty in predicting a country's macroeconomic variables, particularly output and CPI-based inflation. The macroeconomic variables carry signs as per theoretical expectation. (3) The model predicts that external shocks exhibit a much larger impact on macroeconomic variables than those shocks originating from domestic markets. The results have deepened our insight on how the real variables correlate with external uncertainties and the fitful recovery in the recent past.

Author
1. Sze Ying Loo (Universiti Utara Malaysia)
2. Mukaramah Harun (Universiti Utara Malaysia)
Journal
Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies
×

About

The Malaysian Research Repository, hosted by Monash University Malaysia and sponsored by the World Bank, is a nationally recognised and institutionally supported platform dedicated to the collection and preservation of high-quality research papers and related datasets.
Maintained By
Sponsored By