The effects of disaggregate oil shocks on the aggregate expected skewness of the United States

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Authors

Sheng, Xin
Gupta, Rangan
Ji, Qiang

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

We examine the impact of the global economic activity, oil supply, oil-specific consumption demand, and oil inventory demand shocks on the expected aggregate skewness of the United States (US) economy, obtained based on a data-rich environment involving 211 macroeconomic and financial variables in the quarterly period of 1975:Q1 to 2022:Q2. We find that positive oil supply and global economic activity shocks increase the expected macroeconomic skewness in a statistically significant way, with the effects being relatively more pronounced in the lower regime of the aggregate skewness factor, i.e., when the US is witnessing downside risks. Interestingly, oil-specific consumption demand and oil inventory demand shocks contain no predictive ability for the overall expected skewness. With skewness being a metric for policymakers to communicate their beliefs about the path of future risks, our results have important implications for policy decisions.

Description

DATA AVAILABITY STATEMENT: Data are available from the authors upon request.

Keywords

Oil shocks, Expected macroeconomic skewness, US economy, Local projection model, Impulse response functions, United States (US), SDG-08: Decent work and economic growth

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-08:Decent work and economic growth

Citation

Sheng, Xin, Rangan Gupta, and Qiang Ji. 2023. The Effects of Disaggregate Oil Shocks on the Aggregate Expected Skewness of the United States. Risks 11: 186. https://doi.org/10.3390/risks11110186.