1. Edward A. Hudson and Dale W. Jorgenson, “U.S. Energy Policy and Economic Growth, 1975–2000,” Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science 5, no. 2 (Autumn 1974): 461–514.
2. See, also, Alan S. Manne, “ETA: A Model for Energy Technology Assessment,” ibid., 7, no. 2 (Autumn 1976): 379–406; and Michael Kennedy and E. Victor Niemeyer, Energy Supply and Economic Growth Discussion Paper, no. 4–76 (Austin: Department of Economics, University of Texas at Austin, n.d.) For an effort to establish the routes and order of impact on oil-importing countries of the rise in oil prices of 1973–1974, employing various short-term U.S., West European, and Japanese econometric models, see, notably
3. Edward R. Fried and Charles L. Schultze (eds.), Higher Oil Prices and the World Economy ( Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 1975 ), See, also
4. Charles J. Hitch (ed.), Modeling Energy-economy Interactions: Five Approaches (Washington, D.C.: Resources for the Future, September 1977); and
5. Energy Modeling Forum, Energy and the Economy vol. I (Palo Alto, September 1977). Chapter 3 contains further observations on some of the energy-economy models developed in the 1970’s.