DRE 7011 Lecture series on Oil Markets and the Macro Economy

APPLIES TO ACADEMIC YEAR 2015/2016

DRE 7011 Lecture series on Oil Markets and the Macro Economy


Responsible for the course
Hilde C Bjørnland

Department
Department of Economics

Term
According to study plan

ECTS Credits
3

Language of instruction
English

Introduction
Please note that this course will be revised before it is offered again.

Learning outcome
After taking this course the students should have a solid knowledge of advanced research in oil market models and the link between oil prices, the macroeconomy and monetary policy.

To model and forecast the oil market, the students should master and be able to produce sophisticated research using a variety of linear and non-linear time series methods.

To analyse the link between the oil market, the macroeconomy and monetary policy, the students will be familiar with, among others, structural vector autoregression (VAR) models and Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models


    Prerequisites
    Admission to a PhD program is a general requirement for participation in PhD courses at BI Norwegian Business School.

    External candidates are kindly asked to attach confirmation of admission to a PhD programme when signing up for a course with the doctoral administration if they want to take exams. However, candidates can be allowed to sit in on courses by approval of the course leader. Sitting in on courses does not permit registration for courses, handing in exams or gaining credits for the course. Course certificates or conformation letters will not be issued for sitting in on courses


    Compulsory reading
    Books:
    Alquist, R., L. Kilian, and T.J. Vigfusson. 2012. “Forecasting the Price of Oil.”. Prepared for: G. Elliott and A. Timmermann, eds., Handbook of Economic Forecasting 2. Amsterdam: North Holland.

    Articles:
    Barsky, R.B., and L. Kilian. “Do We Really Know that Oil Caused the Great Stagflation?. A Monetary Alternative,” in: NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2001, B.S. Bernanke and K. Rogoff (eds.), MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, 137-183.. 2002
    Bodenstein, M., L. Guerrieri, and L. Kilian. 2012. “Monetary Policy Responses to Oil Price Fluctuations,” mimeo, University of Michigan.
    Hamilton, J.D. 1983. “Oil and the Macroeconomy Since World War II”. Journal of Political Economy. 91, 228-248.
    Hamilton, J.D. 2009. “Causes and Consequences of the Oil Shock of 2007-08”. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1, Spring. 215-261
    Hamilton, J.D. 2011. “Nonlinearities and the Macroeconomic Effects of Oil Prices”. Macroeconomic Dynamics, 15. 364-378
    Hamilton, J.D., and A.M. Herrera. 2004. “Oil Shocks and Aggregate Economic Behavior: The Role of Monetary Policy”. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 36. 265-286
    Kilian, L. 2008b. “A Comparison of the Effects of Exogenous Oil Supply Shocks on Output and Inflation in the G7 Countries”. Journal of the European Economic Association, 6. 78-121.
    Kilian, L. 2009a. “Not all Oil Price Shocks Are Alike: Disentangling Demand and Supply Shocks in the Crude Oil Market”. American Economic Review, 99. 1053-1069
    Kilian, L. (2008a), “Exogenous Oil Supply Shocks: How Big Are They and How Much Do They Matter for the U.S. Economy?”. 2008a. “Exogenous Oil Supply Shocks: How Big Are They and How Much Do They Matter for the U.S. Economy?”. Review of Economics and Statistics, 90. 216-240


    Other:
    During the course there will be hand-outs and additional articles relevant for the course and the examination


    Recommended reading

    Course outline
    Lecture 1:
    Alternative Specifications of the Price of Oil
    - Key Oil Price Series
    - One Price?
    - No Oil Price Series is Perfect for all Purposes
    - A Statistically Significant Break in 1973

    Traditional Interpretations of Oil Price Shocks
    - What is an Oil Price Shock?
    - Oil Price Shocks Driven by Oil Supply Shocks
    - The Crude Oil Market Becomes a Global Market
    - What about the Post-1973 Oil Market?
    Hypothesis 1: Wars Cause Oil Price Shocks
    Hypothesis 2: The Case for Endogenous Oil Prices
    Hypothesis 3: The OPEC Cartel Controls Oil Prices
    Synthesis

    A Structural Model of the Global Market for Crude Oil
    - Competing Views of the Global Market for Crude Oil
    - Limitations of Traditional Oil Market Models
    - Examples of Forward-Looking Elements in Expectations of Oil Demand and Oil Supply
    - Key Insights
    - A Structural Model of the Oil Market
    - Why Do We Not Include the Oil Futures Spread?
    - Historical Decompositions for 1978.6-2010.6
    - What Explains the 2003-08 Oil Price Surge
    - Three Policy Conclusions
    - Speculation without a Change in Oil Inventories?
    - Digression: The Short-Run Price Elasticity of Oil Demand

    Financial Speculation
    - The Masters Hypothesis
    - Why Do Policymakers Pay So Much Attention?
    - What is the Evidence on this Hypothesis?
    - What is Speculation?
    - The Role of Speculation in Oil Markets
    - Speculation versus Excessive Speculation
    - What is Excessive Speculation?

    Conclusion
    - Increased Financialization of Oil Futures Markets
    - Do Index Funds Cause Oil Price Increases?
    - Do Oil Futures Prices Predict Oil Spot Prices
    - Is there a Theoretical Link from Inflows into Index Funds to Higher Spot Prices?
    - Did Index Funds Cause the Oil Price-Inventory Relationship to Collapse?
    - What Do Structural Oil Markets Tell Us?
    - The Role of Time-Varying Risk Premia
    - Index Funds and Oil Price Volatility
    - What is the Consensus?

    Lecture 2:
    Forecasting the Real Price of Oil and Quantifying Oil Price Risks
    - Background
    - Why Real-Time Data Matter
    - The Baumeister-Kilian Real-Time Data Set
    - Key Parameters for the Forecasting Horserace
    - Candidate Models
    - Results
    - Limitations of Standard Oil Price Forecasts
    - Forecast Scenarios
    - Examples of Scenarios
    - Probability Weighted Real-Time Density Forecasts
    - Real-Time Risk Analysis
    - Case Study: December 2010.

    Lecture 3:
    A Review of the Channels of Transmission of Exogenous Oil Price Shocks
    Production Channels
    Direct Effects
    Indirect Effects
    Consumption Channels
    Direct Effects
    Indirect Effects
    Summary of the Demand-Side Channels of Transmission
    Summary of the Supply-Side Channels of Transmission
    Are Macroeconomic Responses Asymmetric in Oil Price Increases and Decreases?
    - The Literature on Oil Prices and the Economy
    - Asymmetric Models of the Transmission of Oil Price Shocks
    - Two Types of Studies in the Literature
    - Censored Oil Price VAR Models
    - Problems with Estimates of Asymmetric Responses from Censored VAR Models
    - A Stylized Static Model
    - What if the DGP is a Linear Symmetric VAR?
    - What if the DGP Is an Asymmetric Dynamic Model?
    - A General Model of the Oil Price-Economy Link
    - Computing Asymmetric Responses Properly
    - The Standard Approach to Constructing Asymmetric Responses
    - How Different is the Traditional Response from the Correctly Computed Response?

    Summary
    - Testing for Symmetry in the Responses
    - Testing Models of Net Energy Price Increases
    - Testing Symmetry in Models of Net Energy Price Increases
    - Implications for the Literature on the Transmission of Oil Price Shocks

    Evidence from (Pseudo) Linear VAR Models
    - Two Seeming Puzzles

    Summary
    - Why Structural Oil Market Models Are Important

    Do Oil Prices Forecast Real GDP?
    - Using Oil Prices to Forecast Real GDP Growth
    - Possible Explanations of the Limited Success of Linear Forecasting Models
    - Nonlinear Forecasting Models

    Lecture 4:
    Monetary Policy Responses to Oil Price Fluctuations
    - The Central Message
    - This Insight is Not New
    - Policy Makers Have Been Slow to Accept This Point

    Oil Prices and Monetary Policy: A Review
    - The Monetary Policy Regime Shifts Hypothesis
    - The Monetary Policy Reaction Hypothesis

    The Bernanke, Gertler, and Watson (1997) Model
    Towards a New Class of Structural Models
    An Open Economy DSGE Analysis of Policy Responses with Endogenous Oil Prices
    Empirical Results
    Welfare Analysis
    Conclusions
    Extensions

      Computer-based tools
      It's learning/homepage

      Learning process and workload
      A course of 3 ECTS credits corresponds to a workload of 80-90 hours.
      Lectures: 15 h.

      Please note that while attendance is not compulsory in all courses, it is the student’s own responsibility to obtain any information provided in class that is not included on the course homepage/It's learning or text book.




      Examination
      Course paper.
      Graded pass/fail

      Examination code(s)
      DRE 70111 course paper counts for 100% of the final grade in the course. The gradescale is pass/fail

      Examination support materials
      Exam aids at written examinations are explained under exam information in our web-based Student handbook. Please note use of calculator and dictionary. http://www.bi.edu/studenthandbook/examaids

      Re-sit examination
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      The assessment in some courses is based on more than one exam code.
      Where this is the case, you may retake only the assessed components of one of these exam codes.
      Where this is not the case, all of the assessed components of the course must be retaken.


      Additional information
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