Today versus Tomorrow: The Sensitivity of the Non-Oil Current Account Balance to Permanent and Current Income

This paper applies the Permanent Income Model to the non-oil current accounts of the major oil exporters to assess the extent to which national consumption decisions in these countries are made on the basis of permanent versus current income. A test of whether the return on oil wealth and oil balanc...

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description This paper applies the Permanent Income Model to the non-oil current accounts of the major oil exporters to assess the extent to which national consumption decisions in these countries are made on the basis of permanent versus current income. A test of whether the return on oil wealth and oil balance coefficients sum to unity is accepted for all specifications that adjust the return on wealth for future population changes. For oil-exporting countries outside Africa, around half of the fluctuations in the private sector non-oil balance are driven by considerations of changes in permanent income (the return on oil wealth) rather than current income. By contrast, for the public sector and African countries permanent income has little or no effect.
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subjects Balance of payments
Consumption (Economics)
Econometric models
Economic Models
Mathematical models
National Income
Non-oil Current Account
Nonoil Sector
Oil Exporting Countries
Oil Prices
Oil Revenues
Oil Wealth
Permanent Income Model
Petroleum industry and trade
Rate Of Return
Revenue
title Today versus Tomorrow: The Sensitivity of the Non-Oil Current Account Balance to Permanent and Current Income
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