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Title: The Impacts of Lower Natural Gas Prices on Jobs in the US Manufacturing Sector
Citation Type: Miscellaneous
Publication Year: 2017
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Abstract: The recovery of the US manufacturing sector following the 2008–2009 economic recession has coincided with a sharp drop in natural gas prices. Popular discussion has often attributed a large portion of the manufacturing recovery to this drop in gas prices, but little rigorous analysis has been conducted on this issue. We use confidential plant-level data to estimate the manufacturing employment effects of changes in natural gas and other energy prices. Previous analyses have used aggregated data and failed to control for multiple drivers of employment dynamics, such as other input costs and proximity to product demand. We show that controlling for these factors substantially diminishes the effects of natural gas and electricity prices on manufacturing employment. Accounting for the direct effects of natural gas prices as well as the indirect effects via electricity prices, we estimate that the decline in natural gas prices between 2007 and 2012 raised overall manufacturing employment by 0.6 percent. For industries in the top quartile of the gas intensity distribution, the natural gas price drop raised employment by three times as much— that is, 1.8 percent.
Url: http://www.rff.org/files/document/file/RFF Rpt Gas Prices Jobs.pdf
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Authors: Gray, Wayne; Linn, Joshua; Morgenstern, Richard
Publisher: Resources For The Future
Data Collections: IPUMS CPS
Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure, Other, Work, Family, and Time
Countries: United States