TY - JOUR
T1 - Gasoline consumption in Saudi Arabia: an analysis of consumer attitudes and perceptions using microsurvey data
AU - Al-Sahlawi, Mohammad Abdulaziz
AU - Al-Titi, Omar Ahmad Khalid
AU - Miah, Fazlul Hoque
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - The study analyses gasoline consumption behaviour by ordinary consumers in Saudi Arabia using household-level disaggregated survey data. We applied parametric methods to test 10 hypotheses related to gasoline consumption. To collect the data, we surveyed 1862 households across 13 regions of the country. The empirical results show that gasoline consumption is significantly affected by age, nationality, education, employment characteristics, household size, vehicle engine size, gasoline price, household location and consumers' concern about future price change, but it is not affected by income. We also find that consumption varies among different groups within each factor and that many differences are statistically significant. The importance and contribution of this study stem from the fact that there is no research on gasoline demand using household-level disaggregated survey data in Saudi Arabia, and thus our results should be useful to policymakers. Our study is particularly timely c
AB - The study analyses gasoline consumption behaviour by ordinary consumers in Saudi Arabia using household-level disaggregated survey data. We applied parametric methods to test 10 hypotheses related to gasoline consumption. To collect the data, we surveyed 1862 households across 13 regions of the country. The empirical results show that gasoline consumption is significantly affected by age, nationality, education, employment characteristics, household size, vehicle engine size, gasoline price, household location and consumers' concern about future price change, but it is not affected by income. We also find that consumption varies among different groups within each factor and that many differences are statistically significant. The importance and contribution of this study stem from the fact that there is no research on gasoline demand using household-level disaggregated survey data in Saudi Arabia, and thus our results should be useful to policymakers. Our study is particularly timely c
M3 - Article
SN - 1753-0229
JO - OPEC Energy Review
JF - OPEC Energy Review
ER -