Does directed technological change favor energy? Firm-level evidence from Portugal

Economic performance is closely related with energy consumption, the major part of which still comes from non-renewable sources. While endeavoring to promote renewable energy, policy makers are interested in technological change that also increases energy efficiency. However, both growth models of d...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Energy economics Vol. 98; p. 105248
Main Authors: Hou, Zheng, Roseta-Palma, Catarina, Ramalho, Joaquim José dos Santos
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Kidlington Elsevier B.V 01-06-2021
Elsevier Science Ltd
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Summary:Economic performance is closely related with energy consumption, the major part of which still comes from non-renewable sources. While endeavoring to promote renewable energy, policy makers are interested in technological change that also increases energy efficiency. However, both growth models of directed technological change and microeconomic theories regarding innovation suggest that technological change is not necessarily biased towards energy. In order to investigate directed technological change at the micro level, this paper applies stochastic frontier analysis to firm data for 32 economic subsectors, with respect to output produced with four inputs: capital, labor, electricity and fuel. Subsectors demonstrate different levels of technical inefficiency, which could be induced by capital deepening and higher share of financial income in total revenue. Output elasticity of labor is generally high among the subsectors, emphasizing labor as the main driver for economic growth. Output elasticity of capital is low overall, although a few subsectors enjoy better marginal returns. In most subsectors, technological change is biased the most towards labor; between electricity and fuel, technological change has favored fuel in more cases. We infer that the market size effect is likely to overwhelm others in deciding the direction of technological change. Thus, policy should include tools in addition to the energy price in order to induce technological change. •Among Portuguese firms, technological change is generally biased more towards fuel than electricity.•Considering the case of Portugal, this implies that technological change favors non-renewable energy instead of renewables.•Market size effect is likely to overwhelm price effect, so energy prices alone may not be an optimal policy tool to induce technological change.•Labor is the main driver for economic growth, while returns to capital are low. Total factor productivity growth is moderate.•There is much space for improving firm performance by eliminating technical inefficiency.
ISSN:0140-9883
1873-6181
DOI:10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105248