Publication: Does a small cost share reflect a
negligible role for energy in economic
production? Testing for aggregate
production functions including capital,
labor, and useful exergy through a
cointegration-based method
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Abstract
Neoclassical models disregard the role of energy in production, equating a factor's output
elasticity with its cost share, but failing to explain growth
without a residual term. In contrast,
ecological economics acknowledges energy's importance in production, regardless of its cost
share. The aggregate production function (APF) concept, central to neoclassical theory, is also
disputed.
We apply cointegration analysis to test for APFs between output, capital, and labor. We
investigate the inclusion of energy inputs, measuring energy's capacity to generate productive
work (useful exergy). Plausible APFs must verify cointegration and Granger-causality between
output and inputs; and non-negative output elasticities. This method recognizes cases where: a) plausible APFs don't exist; b) energy impacts growth directly; c) energy impacts growth
indirectly, through other inputs. We apply the method to Portugal (1960-2009), considering
standard and quality-corrected capital and labor measures.
Plausible APFs are rarely obtained for capital-labor models. When they are, the residual
growth component is large, and output elasticities disagree with historical cost shares. However,
the residual is virtually eliminated for capital-labor-energy
models with two cointegration
relationships: a) a capital-labor APF, with output elasticities matching historical cost shares; b) a
function estimating capital from useful exergy. These models reconcile energy's significance in
production with cost-share neoclassical assumptions.
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