Friday, March 29, 2013

Cutting energy subsidies will slash carbon emissions: IMF

Cutting energy subsidies will slash carbon emissions while releasing resources for education and health, and helping boost the balance of payments of many countries, the International Monetary Fund has said.
 
An IMF study Energy Subsidy Reform: Lessons and Implications has estimated that direct energy subsidies totaled about 480 billion US dollars or 0.7 percent of global gross domestic product and 2.0 percent of global state revenues. 

Eliminating the subsidies would cut Carbon dioxide emission by 1 to 2 percent which could deliver about 15-30 percent of targets set in the Copenhagen Accord. 

Other emissions including sulfour dioxide (S02) could also be reduced. 

Since rich people consumer more energy than the poor, most of them flowed to richer people.
The study found that on average the richest 20 percent of households in low and middle income countries captured six times the subsidies than the poorest 20 percent. 

"As most subsidy benefits are captured by higher-income households, energy subsidies have important distributive consequences that are often not fully understood. 

"Even future generations are affected through the reduced availability of key inputs for growth and the damaging effects of increased energy consumption on greenhouse gas emissions and global warming." 

Subsidies put strain on budgets, diverting tax revenues from investment to consumption. Analysts say sharp increase in energy prices which are usually subsidized by printing money triggering higher inflation and currency collapse or so-called balance of payments crises. 

"Subsidy expenditures aggravate fiscal imbalances, and crowd out priority public spending and private investment, including in the energy sector," the IMF study said. 

"Underpriced energy distorts resource allocation by encouraging excessive energy consumption, artificially promoting capital-intensive industries (thus discouraging employment creation), reducing incentives for investment in renewable energy, and accelerating the depletion of natural resources.
"Subsidies lead to higher energy consumption, exerting pressure on the balance of payments of net energy importers, while also promoting smuggling to neighbors with higher domestic prices.
The study said in developed countries in particular where energy was market-priced, energy was taxed less than other goods, resulting in 'post-tax' subsidies. 

At a post-tax basis energy subsidies totaled 1.9 trillion US dollars or 2.5 percent of global GDP and 8 percent of government revenues. Advanced economies accounted for 40 percent of the total while, oil exporters accounted for one third. 

"Removing these subsidies could lead to a 13 percent decline in CO2 emissions and generate positive spillover effects by reducing global energy demand," the report said. 

There was resistance to energy price reforms because of lack of confidence that rulers would use the taxes for useful spending, the report said. 

In market pricing energy it was also important to ensure that the lowest income households were protected through a targeted scheme, the IMF study said.