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Issues in Domestic Petroleum Pricing in OilProducing Countries Sanjeev Gupta IMF January 27, 2004 Introduction: Why study domestic petroleum prices? Many oil-producing countries keep domestic prices below free market levels Net oil importers in some cases do not fully reflect international prices. The resulting subsidies can be large and are nontransparent Few studies have quantified these subsidies for a wide range of countries and examined their economic effects 2 Subsidy Estimates: Methodology Subsidies can be broadly defined as the difference between the reduced price of a good with government support and the price of the good in the absence of such support. Subsidy = (M-P)C M = “free market price” = W+D+T W = world wholesale spot price D = marketing + distribution + transport costs (importers only) T = general consumption taxes (VAT, etc.) P = after-tax retail price C = petroleum product consumption 3 Subsidy Estimates: Caveats Marketing, distribution, and transport costs assumed to be the same across countries and time periods; introduces some error, esp. if pipeline constraints create large marginal transport costs However, transport costs are typically only about 2 percent of after-tax retail price Excludes implicit subsidies due to tolerance of nonpayments Some retail price estimates are an average for only a month or quarter (“snapshot”) 4 Subsidy Estimates: Sample Subsidies calculated for 86 countries between 1996-2000 1999 is the latest year available for most countries. In this year, 62 countries in sample: 15 Major Oil Exporters (of which, 13 subsidize) 6 Other Net Oil Exporters 41 Net Oil Importers 5 Table 1. Domestic Petroleum Price Subsidies, 1999 (Median values in parentheses) Average Oil Subsidies (In percent of government expenditure) (In percent of GDP) Major Oil Exporters Of which: Subsidizing Oil Exporters 1/ Other Oil Exporters 2/ Net Oil Importers 3/ Of which: Countries not producing oil 4/ 3.5 (2.5) 15.2 (8.6) 4.4 -1.9 (3.7) (-1.8) 18.7 -7.0 (10.8) (-7.0) -2.2 (-2.1) -8.3 (-8.6) -1.7 (-1.6) -7.0 (-6.4) Memo items: Subsidy Rate by Type of Product (in percent) for Subsidizing Oil Exporters Gasoline 9 (8) Diesel 48 (46) Residential Light Fuel Oil 71 (78) Source: IMF staff estimates. Based on IFS exchange rates. 1/ Includes Venezuela and Ecuador. 2/ Includes Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia. 3/ Includes Brazil, Chile, Guatemala, Paraguay, Peru. 4/ Includes Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Uruguay. Table 2. Domestic Petroleum Price Subsidies in Oil Exprting Countries, 1996-2000 (In percent of GDP) Country 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 Algeria Azerbaijan 1/ Ecuador Indonesia Iran Official exchange rate Weighted average exchange rate 2/ Kazakhstan Kuwait Libya Mexico Nigeria Norway Qatar Russian Federation Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates Venezuela 3.0 .. .. .. 2.2 .. 3.3 .. .. .. 1.4 7.7 2.5 .. -1.5 6.5 .. 16.6 12.6 .. 10.0 13.2 .. 5.1 .. .. .. -4.5 3.9 .. 7.4 1.9 .. .. .. .. 4.3 5.1 5.8 1.0 .. .. 3.2 5.0 7.0 1.4 5.9 .. .. .. -0.9 .. -4.8 .. -5.0 .. .. 2.9 4.2 12.6 6.8 4.8 0.7 -0.9 2.5 -3.9 2.4 8.0 5.9 1.7 3.7 .. .. .. -0.4 .. -4.5 .. .. .. .. 4.9 Average subsidy Sample size 4.2 7 4.0 11 0.2 6 3.5 15 7.9 5 Memo item: Average price of crude oil (U.S$ barrel, U.K. Brent) 20.5 19.1 12.7 17.7 28.3 Source: EIA, IFS, and authors' estimates 1/ Based on separate IMF Staff estimates. 2/ Based on a trade-weighted average of the official and market exchange rates. Subsidy Estimates: Results Subsidies are large — averaged 3.5 percent of GDP in 1999 among major oil exporters Among net oil importers, the average revenue from petroleum taxation was 2.2 percent of GDP in 1999. Subsidies positively correlated with world oil price Residential fuel oil and auto diesel subsidized more heavily than gasoline 8 Economic Effects of Subsidies Efficiency In the absence of price distortions, most efficient to set domestic prices equal to the world wholesale spot price plus marketing and distribution costs (W+D) Caveats: • Need for government revenue may make net taxation more efficient • Environmental externalities may argue for further taxation (in excess of 100 percent, Parry 2001) 9 Economic Effects of Subsidies On the other hand, large exporters may have some monopoly power in world oil markets so that the marginal revenue from exporting is less than the world wholesale price plus marketing and distribution costs: R (W D T ) X 1 X dR dW W X D T W 1 X dX dX X , P W D T –R = revenue, X = exports, ηX,P = price elasticity of world oil demand, and XW = total world oil demand – Marginal revenue<(W+D) if significant share of world market (X/ XW is high) and η X,P is low 10 Economic Effects of Subsidies Thus, the opportunity cost of not exporting may be lower than the world price for OPEC as a whole or its dominant members. The marginal revenue for OPEC can be as low as 25 percent of the non-market-power case. 11 Economic Effects of Subsidies Table 3. Marginal Revenue from Exporting for Largest Oil Exporters All OPEC Saudi Arabia Russian Fed. Norway Venezuela, RB Exports as Share of World Consumption 1/ 32.7 10.8 5.1 4.3 4.0 (η = -.25) .25 .75 .88 .90 .91 Marginal Revenue 2/ (η = -.50) .63 .88 .94 .95 .95 (η = -.75) .75 .92 .96 .97 .97 Sources: Energy Information Administration (various years); and authors’ estimates. 1/ For 1998 (Energy Information Administration 2001). 2/ As fraction of small exporter (no-market-power) case; assumes distribution and marketing costs are 75 percent of wholesale price. 12 Economic Effects of Subsidies Efficiency On balance, the arguments for taxation outweigh the arguments for subsidization: • Need for government revenue • Environmental externalities However, most major oil exporters subsidize, resulting in efficiency (deadweight) losses • Assuming environmental externalities, deadweight losses amount to 0.5 to 12.4 percent of GDP • Assuming no environmental externalities, deadweight losses amount to between 0 and 7 percent of GDP 13 Economic Effects of Subsidies Equity Poorly targeted means of distributing purchasing power to the poor—majority of benefits go to the non-poor • In Venezuela, the richest 20 percent receive 6½ times more in subsidies per person than the poorest 33 percent (World Bank 1995) • In Ecuador, the more expensive energy products received the highest subsidies, while household kerosene, used by poor households, was not subsidized (World Bank 1994) Pro-rich bias compounded by possible smuggling and corruption 14 Table 5. Share of Total Expenditures by Quintile: Mexico and Ecuador (In percent of total spending) Quintile Electricity Gasoline 1/ Gas/ LPG Kerex Others 2/ Mexico 1 2 3 4 5 Ecuador 1 2 3 4 5 5.4 10.2 15.9 21.6 46.8 0.9 3.9 9.3 19.4 66.5 6.7 13.8 18.5 25.1 35.9 15.1 18.3 20.2 21.7 24.8 26.1 24.0 20.4 17.4 12.1 9.2 15.3 16.2 26.4 32.9 … … … … … 15.2 23.2 20.1 22.1 19.4 43.2 20.6 13.8 7.6 14.8 … … … … … Sources: UNDP/World Bank (1994) “Ecuador: Energy Pricing, Poverty and Social Mitigation” Report No. 12831-EC, p. 40; and IMF staff calculations based on the 1996 Mexican Income and Expenditure Household Survey; INEGI 1996. 1/ Gasoline refers to gasoline, diesel, or gas purchased as fuel for vehicles. 2/ Includes coal, fire wood, heating oil, candles, and others such as paper or cardboard. 15 Economic Effects of Subsidies Fiscal opportunity costs In subsidizing countries, the average subsidy is larger than the average fiscal deficit or total health spending In Ecuador and Venezuela, the implicit subsidy exceeds public spending on health 16 Figure 2. Composition of Government Expenditure in Major Subsidizing Oil Exporting Countries 1/ 6 In percent of GDP 5 4 3 2 1 0 Oil subsidies (13) Education Spending (11) Health Spending (12) 1/ Unweighted averages for subsidizing oil-exporting countries. Oil subsidies are for 1999; expenditure data are an average over the period 1997-99. Number of countries in parentheses. Table 7. Social Indicators and Social Spending in Subsidizing Oil-Exporting and Other Countries, 1997–1999 Education Spending Illiteracy Infant Rate Mortality Life (percent of Rate (per Expectancy adult 1,000 live population) births) Health Spending Immunization Under 5 Rate against GDP Per Mortality Measles Capita (in (in percent (in (in percent Rate (per (percent of (constant percent of total percent of total 1,000 live children aged 1995 of GDP) expenditure) of GDP) expenditure) births) less than 12 US$) months) Subsidizing Oil-Exporting Countries (13) 1/ 69 20 26 36 88 3,259 5.0 15.7 2.0 5.8 Of which: Algeria Ecuador Indonesia Nigeria Saudi Arabia Venezuela, República Bolivariana de 71 69 65 49 72 73 35 9 14 39 25 8 35 29 43 82 19 21 39 37 54 149 26 24 76 87 80 48 92 79 1,534 1,521 1,025 253 6,841 3,451 8.8 3.1 .. 1.4 8.8 3.8 28.0 15.6 .. 7.6 23.1 19.7 1.5 0.9 0.6 0.7 2.9 1.4 4.9 4.8 3.3 3.8 7.6 7.0 Low-Income Countries (56) 55 41 75 126 67 423 4.0 15.0 2.0 6.8 Lower-Middle-Income Countries (42) 68 16 33 44 86 1,642 4.8 16.6 2.3 7.5 Upper-Middle-Income Countries (26) 71 11 18 26 90 5,306 4.7 14.4 3.3 9.7 Source: World Development Indicators (World Bank, 2001). Expenditure data from IMF Staff Reports. 1/ Numbers in parentheses refer to the number of countries in the different income groups in 1999. 18 Economic Effects of Subsidies Cyclicality For net oil exporters, periods of high world oil prices tend to be both periods of economic boom and periods of higher domestic subsidies Petroleum subsidies are thus procyclical, exacerbating the effects of oil price shocks on economic volatility 19 Successful Reform Preconditions Establish social protection mechanisms to compensate losers (Indonesia); design using PSIA Use publicity campaigns to inform public of trade-offs (Egypt) Timing Optimal speed of reform depends on trade-off between fiscal need and adverse social consequences Existence of good social protection mechanisms allows faster reform Political environment External environment—periods of low world oil prices may facilitate movement to automatic price mechanisms20 Conclusion Major oil-exporting countries tend to be large net subsidizers of petroleum Subsidization does not appear to be a wise use of resources Reform requires careful design to overcome political opposition 21