Abstract
Introduction
In a recent paper De Michelis et al. (2020),
Intuitively, the effect of oil price uncertainty (volatility) on economic activity is generally explained by the real option theory (see for example, Bernanke (1983), Pindyck (1991), and Dixit and Pindyck (1994)), which suggests that decision-making is affected by uncertainty because it raises the option value of waiting. In other words, given that the cost associated with wrong investment decisions is very high, uncertainty makes firms and, in the case of durable goods, also consumers more cautious. As a result, economic agents postpone investment, hiring and consumption decisions for precautionary savings reasons to periods of lower uncertainty, which results in cyclical fluctuations in macroeconomic aggregates (Punzi, 2019). In other words, oil price uncertainty is expected to negatively impact consumption (as well as investment and overall output). 2
Note that, while effects of oil price uncertainty on aggregate and disaggregate consumption of the overall U.S. has been analysed before (see for example, Guo and Kliesen (2005), Elder and Serletis (2010), Kilian and Vigfusson (2011)), to the best of our knowledge this is the first study to analyse the state-level impact of oil price volatility accounting for oil dependency. The remainder of the paper is organized as follows: the next section discusses the data, followed by the methodology and empirical results, with the final section concluding the paper.
Data
In this paper, we employ the state-level data for household consumption, financial wealth, owner-occupied housing wealth and personal income from Case et al. (2005, 2013). Due to data availability, there are two main limitations of the dataset: (i) households' consumption spending is proxied by total retail sales; and (ii) households' financial wealth includes holdings of mutual funds only, which are mostly interpolated. Despite these features of the data that Case et al. (2013) acknowledges, it is important to note that this is virtually the only dataset that contains unique information about aggregate wealth (and its composition) for each of the 50 U.S. states (plus D.C.) and over a relatively long time-span covering the quarterly period of 1975:Q1–2012:Q2. Note that, we could not use the data set of De Michelis et al. (2020) to proxy consumption as it is not publicly available, besides the fact that there is no other data source besides the one of Case et al. (2005, 2013), which includes state-level information of stock wealth and housing wealth, required to appropriately model our consumption function. 3 To address potential concerns regarding the robustness of findings when extending the sample period beyond the end of the novel dataset of Case et al. (2005, 2013), we perform an annual state-level analysis for the U.S. over the sample period 1975 to 2018, which supports the quarterly results at the state level.
In addition, we construct a realised volatility series using the daily data of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil price obtained from the Global Financial Database. In this regard, we follow Andersen and Bollerslev (1998), and compute realised volatility from the sum of daily squared log-returns of the oil price over a specific quarter. This approach provides an observable measure of oil market volatility unlike conditional volatility obtained from generalised autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity (GARCH)-type models, which in turn tends to make volatility model specific. Following De Michelis et al. (2020), we also construct a state-specific oil dependency series using U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) data on oil production and oil consumption. Variables names with descriptions and sources are depicted in Table 1.
Descriptive statistics are reported in Table 2. The average consumption per capita across all states over the sample period (expressed in constant 2000 dollars) amounts to $2,611. A minimum value of $337 was recorded in the state of Tennessee in 1982, with a high of $4,564 recorded in New Hampshire in 2006. The average income per capita is $25,624 varying between a low of $13,199 in Mississippi and a maximum of $57,768 in the District of Columbia. The average housing wealth per capita across all states is $35.62, while the average stock market wealth per capita is $43,328.
Methodology and empirical results
We inspect the univariate characteristics of the data using Pesaran’s (2007) second generation CIPS unit root test, based on the fact that there is evidence of the existence of cross-sectional dependence. All three tests in Table 3 provide support for the existence of cross-sectional dependence by rejecting the null of cross-sectional independence at the one per cent level (Frees, 1995, 2004; Friedman, 1937; Pesaran, 2004). This result is expected given that all states form part of a single country and flows of goods and services, bootlegging behaviour of consumers, and spillover effects of uncertainty can easily occur.
From Table 4, we conclude that the state-level consumption and income panels are non-stationary I(1), as we reject the null of a unit root after differencing the variables once. This serves as justification to include these variables in the long-run steady-state component of an error correction model. The variables of interest, oil price uncertainty,
Descriptive statistics.
Cross-sectional dependence tests.
Panel unit root tests results in the presence of cross-sectional dependence.
*/**/*** indicates rejection of the null at the 10/5/1% level.
Critical values: 10% = −2.01; 5% = −2.06; 1% = −2.14.
Given the non-stationary properties of income and consumption data, we specify an error correction model for consumption, in line with Case et al. (2013), but add (state-invariant) realised oil price volatility to the equation:
Additionally, we model the impact of oil price volatility on consumption conditional on the level of oil dependency of individual states, by interacting the realised oil price volatility measure with oil dependency:
Consumption, as well as housing and stock market wealth variables, are expressed in natural logarithmic form, while the realised oil price volatility variable,
We start by addressing heterogeneity concerns, with real income and real consumption levels varying substantially across U.S. states (refer to minimum and maximum values in Table 2 with descriptive statistics). Likewise, notable differences exist in oil dependency levels across states. Moreover, numerous oil price shocks have been recorded over the sample period, justifying testing for the validity of time effects in addition to that of state effects. Results are reported in Table 5.
Tests for validity of state-specific effects and time effects.
We reject the null that state-level effects are jointly significantly different from zero. However, when considering time effects on its own, there is no strong evidence for dynamic adjustment over time. When testing for time effect while controlling for state effects, there is evidence of the validity of time effects. For this reason, we make use of a two-way error component model to obtain the long-run residual to construct an error correction model (ECM) as a robustness check for the estimation results reported in Table 7. The results are qualitatively similar.
Pooled Mean Group estimation across all U.S. states, 1975Q1 to 2012Q2.a
Inference based on robust standard errors.
*
aThe novel Case et al. (2005, 2013) dataset containing data for consumption, housing and stock market wealth stock etc. at the state level used in this paper is not available in quarterly format post 2012, while the dataset of De Michelis et al. (2020) is not publically available. However, analysis of annual data that extends beyond 2012, notably from 1975 to 2018 sourced from the
In recent years, the dynamic panel data literature has begun to focus on panels in which both the cross-sectional (
In this study we make use of Pesaran et al.’s (1997, 1999) Pooled Mean Group (PMG) estimator to account for the long-run steady-state relationship that exists between per capita consumption and income as dictated by economic theory, but also for the short-run dynamic adjustment impacts of housing and stock market wealth as well as oil price uncertainty and oil dependency. Lagged consumption is also included to account for habit persistence in consumption expenditure behaviour. In typical consumption analysis the parameters of primary interest would be the long-run coefficient, θ, and the error-correction speed of adjustment parameter, γ (see for instance Pesaran et al., 1997, 1999). Case et al. (2005, 2013) compare the housing wealth effect with the stock market wealth effect and report that the housing wealth effect is more pronounced than that of stock market wealth. In this study, we focus on the impact of oil price volatility and oil dependency on consumer expenditure, as proxied by retail sales. The cointegration results are contained in Table 6, and the PMG estimation results are reported in Table 7 for models specified in equations (1) and (2), displaying the common long-run income elasticity and the averaged short-run parameter estimates. 4
Panel cointegration test results.
Based on the Kao (1999) and Pedroni (2004) cointegration tests, we reject the null of no cointegration in favour of the existence of a long-run cointegrated relationship between per capita real consumption expenditure and real personal income.
For the period under consideration, the income elasticity, or marginal propensity to consume, is equal to 0.8 in both models. All other parameters are also almost identical for the two model specifications, and all coefficients are statistically significant at the 1 per cent level. The error-correction speed of adjustment parameter is negative, implying that the variables in the long-run equation exhibit a return to long-run equilibrium, albeit at a slow rate given that the coefficient is closer to zero than to one in absolute terms. The average impact of realised oil price volatility is negative on consumption growth, so is its average impact conditional on the oil dependency of individual states.
It is however of interest to analyse the impact on the macroeconomy, or consumer behaviour specifically, of developments in the oil market, based on the fact that a number of states in the U.S. are oil producers, some of them in a significantly large volume (like Texas, Alaska, North Dakota, New Mexico, Oklahoma and others) while other states have no oil-producing capacity. The oil dependency of states also varies substantially (refer to Table A1 in the online Appendix for average oil production, oil consumption and oil dependency figures).
When considering the full result, with state-specific short-run results, all state-specific error-correction speed of adjustment parameters are negative and statistically significant at conventional levels. Parameters for
The coefficients representing the relative magnitude of the negative impact of oil price volatility on consumption, as well as that of oil price volatility conditional on oil dependency – our principal interest in this study – are depicted in Figure 1. The impact of oil price volatility,

The impact of realised oil price volatility and realized volatility conditional on oil dependency on consumption, by state (ranked by
The five states being impacted most negatively by oil price volatility are Vermont, Wyoming, New Mexico, Mississippi and South Carolina. Of these, Wyoming, New Mexico and Mississippi are also important oil producers. When also taking the oil dependency of the states into account, Wyoming, New Mexico and Mississippi again appear amongst the top five states being most severely negatively impacted. However, Alaska, the second largest oil-producing country, also enters the list, moving up from position 30 in the ranking of the impact of only oil price volatility.
Texas and California, despite being large oil producers, are not amongst the states most harshly impacted, but they rank somewhat lower in terms of oil dependency and rank higher in income and consumption.
The outcome of Vermont in the first analysis is somewhat surprising given that the state does not produce oil, nor does it rank high in terms of oil consumption and oil dependency. When taking West Virginia’s oil dependency into account, the impact seems less severe (West Virginia moves from position 22 to position 40).
Amongst the states ranking highest in terms of the negative impact of oil market development are also a number of states ranking low in terms of per capita income and per capita consumption. These include New Mexico, Tennessee, South Dakota, Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas. The latter three states also rank low in terms of housing wealth per capita. At the same token, several states rank high in terms of negative oil uncertainty impact and rank low on stock market wealth. These states include New Mexico, Wyoming, Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee, Georgia, South Dakota and North Dakota.
The results, therefore, suggest that oil-producing states might be more severely impacted by oil price uncertainty. A low number for the oil dependency measure is, therefore, an indication that the countries production exceeds the consumption by some margin, and may hint towards possible exposure in terms of the dependence of the state in selling its oil to neighbouring states or on the international market. Furthermore, the states with lower per capita income and consumption expenditure also appear to be more vulnerable to the negative impact of negative developments and uncertainty in the oil market, as they may have less access to a stock of wealth and other means of recourse.
From the spatial analysis portrayed in the Figures A1 to A4 in the online Appendix, the overlap is evident between low income−low consumption states and states with a sizable negative impact of oil price uncertainty on real consumption, reflected by states being lighter shaded. These states notably include Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, South Carolina, New Mexico, and Idaho. North Carolina and Georgia are also among the states more severely impacted by oil uncertainty, although they rank slightly higher on income and consumption. With the exception of Idaho, all these states are in the Southeast and Southwest regions, traditionally regions with the highest poverty levels in the country.
Wyoming and Alaska, the two states that rank first and second in terms of the negative impact on consumption are exceptions in that these are wealthier states. The latter two states are however, both large oil producers and the two states where production exceeds consumption by the largest margin. What is clear is the heterogeneous nature of the negative impact of oil price uncertainty on macroeconomic outcomes in general, and consumption expenditure specifically.
Conclusion
This paper studies the effects of oil price uncertainty and oil dependency on consumption as proxied by retail sales across U.S. states. De Michelis et al. (2020) show that benefits from oil price decreases are smaller than the losses from oil price increases across U.S. states. At the outset, the expectation is, therefore that periods of oil price volatility will result in a net negative impact on economic activity, including consumption expenditure (on asymmetric responses to oil price changes, also see Apergis et al., 2015 and Ajmi et al., 2015). The country- and state-level evidence from De Michelis et al. (2020) further highlights that varying oil dependency may imply differences in consumption responses across regions and states. An oil price decline leads to increases in consumption in oil-importing countries, even though it may take time to materialise fully. In contrast, net oil-exporting countries are shown to experience a rapid decline in consumption following an oil price decline, which decline may be attributed to a decline in investment and wealth effects. Oil price increases, on the other hand, lead to a smaller than expected boost to oil-exporters’ economies, attributed to the fact that these economies may be strained by the downturn experienced by their oil-importing trading partners. In terms of the United States, neither a large net oil importer nor a large net oil-exporter, more mixed effects are reported. Just like countries in the world, U.S. states are also heterogeneous in their oil dependence. While Texas and Utah are roughly oil independent, Alaska produces substantially more oil than consumed, with a very large negative oil dependency.
In this study, we apply Pesaran’s (1997, 1999) Pooled Mean group estimator to estimate an error correction model to determine the impact of oil price uncertainty and oil dependency on consumption growth, while controlling for housing and stock market wealth effects. Our results show that the oil-producing states of Alaska, Wyoming, New Mexico and Mississippi are amongst the states being most severely negatively impacted by oil price volatility when considering oil dependency. When considering income per capita and consumption levels of individual states, it also becomes evident that states like New Mexico, Tennessee, South Dakota, Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas rank high in terms of the negative impact of oil uncertainty on consumption, but they at the same time are representative of the poorer states in terms of income as well as stock market wealth and consumer expenditure, exposing their vulnerability to uncertainty and adverse developments related to the oil market. States that are least impacted by oil uncertainty include Illinois, Nebraska, Utah, New York and Washington.
Findings by Guo and Kliesen (2005) and supported by Hamilton (1996, 2003) suggest that uncertainty about the future direction of prices matters more than the actual increase in the price of crude oil, with adverse effects on various key measures of the U.S. macroeconomy, including fixed investment, consumption, employment and the unemployment rate. Increased uncertainty motivates consumers to take a precautionary approach.
The fact that poorer states are more severely impacted by unexpected increases in adverse development and increased uncertainty has recently been pointed by Finck and Tillmann (2020) in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. The authors examine the effect of the unexpected component of the COVID-19 pandemic, to which they refer as “pandemic shock”, across income quartiles. In each state, low-income households exhibit a significantly larger drop in consumption than high-income households, which notion finds support in our analysis that poorer states’ consumption is also more severely impacted by oil price uncertainty than states with a higher income. Given that responses at the state level are evidently heterogeneous, policy authorities need to take account of this, and effect additional state-level response besides the national response to oil uncertainty.
Our analysis is important from the perspective that it provides an avenue to determine the impact of uncertainty on U.S. consumption. The market volatility during the Covid-19 period, and to some extent since 2016 due to the U.S. trade war with China, and the associated adverse effect on consumers, is evidence of the importance of analysis of this nature to guide an appropriate policy response.
Supplemental Material
sj-pdf-1-eea-10.1177_0144598721993227 - Supplemental material for Impact of oil price volatility on state-level consumption of the United States: The role of oil dependence
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-eea-10.1177_0144598721993227 for Impact of oil price volatility on state-level consumption of the United States: The role of oil dependence by Reneé van Eyden, Rangan Gupta, Xin Sheng and Mark E Wohar in Energy Exploration & Exploitation
Footnotes
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