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The effect of mismatched supply and demand of electricity on economic growth in South Africa

Tichinashe Mabugu, Roula Inglesi‐Lotz

2022Energy Sources Part B Economics Planning and Policy14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Since 2008, the South African economy has experienced several power cuts (unplanned or as part of a load-shedding schedule), presumably because of the inability of the electricity supply to cover the demand. This paper examines the impact of such a demand-supply mismatch on the country’s economic growth within a production function framework. To do so, we use an Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model (ARDL) for the period 1985 to 2019. The paper finds that a positive mismatch (or surplus) of electricity (supply>demand) boosts economic growth in the long run. This finding provides evidence that supports the necessity of electricity supply expansion and the promotion of energy efficiency measures that both will create a mismatch (surplus) conducive to economic growth.

Topics & Concepts

EconomicsDistributed lagElectricityMains electricitySupply and demandElectricity demandProduction (economics)ScheduleTime lagDemand curveElectricity generationLagPower (physics)MicroeconomicsEconometricsEngineeringComputer scienceQuantum mechanicsManagementPhysicsElectrical engineeringComputer networkEnergy and Environment ImpactsEnergy, Environment, Economic GrowthEnergy, Environment, and Transportation Policies
The effect of mismatched supply and demand of electricity on economic growth in South Africa | Litcius