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Publication | Open Access

Balancing Act : Cutting Energy Subsidies While Protecting Affordability

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2013

Year

Abstract

The cost of energy in Eastern Europe and
\n Central Asia, as elsewhere, is an important policy issue, as
\n shown by the concerns for energy affordability during the
\n past harsh winter. Governments try to moderate the burden of
\n energy expenditures that is experienced by households
\n through subsidies to the energy providers, so that
\n households pay tariffs below the cost recovery level for the
\n energy they use. These subsidies result in significant
\n pressures on government budgets when international prices
\n rise. They also provide perverse incentives for the
\n overconsumption of energy as households do not pay the true
\n cost of energy, and therefore, have fewer incentives to save
\n or to invest in energy efficiency. Balancing competing
\n claims-fiscal and environmental concerns which would push
\n for raising energy tariffs on the one hand, and
\n affordability and political economy concerns which push for
\n keeping tariffs artificially low on the other-is a task that
\n policy makers in the region are increasingly unable to put
\n off. Addressing this issue is all the more pressing as the
\n ongoing crisis continues to add stress to government
\n budgets, and that international energy prices remain high.
\n While challenging, the reforms needed for this balancing act
\n can build on much that has been learned in the last decade
\n about improving the effectiveness of social assistance
\n systems and increasing energy efficiency. This is the first
\n report to assess, at the micro level for the whole region,
\n the distributional impact of raising energy tariffs to cost
\n recovery levels and to simulate policy options to cushion
\n these impacts. In conclusion, this report highlights that
\n countries face a difficult balancing act between fiscal and
\n environmental concerns that call for raising energy tariffs
\n to lower fiscal burdens and curb household consumption and
\n concerns for the affordability of energy and the political
\n economy of unpopular reforms.