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Coping with Higher Oil Prices March 8, 2006

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Title: Coping with Higher Oil Prices March 8, 2006


1
Coping with Higher Oil PricesMarch 8, 2006
  • Robert Bacon Masami Kojima
  • Oil, Gas, and Mining Policy Division
  • Funded by ESMAP

2
Sector-level policies for coping with higher oil
prices
  • 38 country case studies
  • Overview of policies
  • Price-based
  • Quantity-based
  • Substitution and efficiency improvement
  • Lessons from effective and ineffective policies

3
Country case studies
  • Non-oil producing countries
  • Africa Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi,
    Morocco, Mozambique, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania,
    Zambia, Uganda
  • Asia Cambodia, Lao PDR, Sri Lanka,
  • South America Honduras, Nicaragua
  • Oil-producing net importers
  • Africa Ghana, Tunisia
  • Asia Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Kyrgyz
    Republic, Pakistan, Philippines, Thailand
  • South America Guatemala, Brazil, Chile
  • Net oil exporters
  • Africa Cameroon, Egypt, Nigeria
  • Asia Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Vietnam
  • South America Argentina, Mexico, Venezuela
  • Regional
  • PetroCaribe

4
Policy questions for this study
  • How is the burden of the higher costs being
    shared between various parties in the economy?
  • How can governments encourage savings in
    petroleum fuel use/cost?
  • How can governments achieve public buy-in?
  • How can governments design policies for sustained
    high oil prices and likely trends in oil
    consumption?

5
Factors affecting policy formulation
  • Growth in ratio of oil consumption to GDP
    expected for low-income countries
  • ? Long-term policies to address sustained high
    oil prices and increasing vulnerability needed
  • Challenges in the transport sector
  • Substantial and rapidly growing oil consumption
  • Reducing oil dependence difficult
  • ? Full price increase pass-through and
    appropriate taxes
  • Challenges in the power sector
  • Droughts affecting hydro potential
  • Fuel substitution difficult for countries with no
    coal and no natural gas
  • ? Focus on commercial and technical efficiency
    gains

6
Most commonly debated policy questions
  • Subsidy/tax reduction or no subsidy/no tax
    reduction
  • Price control or no price control
  • Frequency of price adjustmentsoil price
    volatility
  • When to announce price adjustments (public
    information campaign vs. danger of hoarding, fuel
    shortages)

7
Price-based policies
  • No government intervention full pass-through of
    world oil price increase
  • Partial pass-through through direct government
    intervention
  • Tax reductions or exemptions
  • Product cross-subsidies
  • Temporal cross-subsidies oil price stabilization
    funds
  • Direct government subsidies
  • Squeezing margins of oil companies
  • Price caps, price freeze, requiring written
    justification, urging public to boycott stations
    that raise prices
  • Export taxes or bans

8
Quantity-based policies
  • Rationing
  • Fuel rationing (Kyrgyz in response to
    Kazakhstans export ban, diesel in Malaysia),
    vouchers for subsidized fuels, reduced supply
    (suspension of new LPG connections in India),
    rolling black-outs for power
  • Energy-saving measures
  • Rationing limits on office and street lighting,
    hours of business, neon lights, work days,
    driving, heating and cooling, use of elevators,
    fuel allocation to government agencies
    suspension of government vehicle purchase
  • Promotion of energy-efficient appliances and
    equipment, public transport
  • Higher taxes or ban on energy inefficient
    appliances and equipment

9
Reducing supply costs
  • Negotiation with suppliers
  • Price hedging
  • Bulk purchase
  • Strategic reserves

10
Diversifying out of oil
  • Natural gas (Argentina, Egypt, Pakistan,
    Philippines, Tunisia)
  • Coal coal to liquids (China, Indonesia)
  • Renewables hydro, geothermal, etc.
  • Biofuels
  • Ethanol to substitute gasoline
  • Biodiesel to substitute petroleum diesel
  • Ethanol from sugarcane is the cheapest biofuel
    today

11
Winning public buy-in
  • Governments perceived legitimacy, public support
  • Governments credibility for delivery of public
    goods
  • Burden-sharing in acceptable manner, speed of
    policy adoption, strategic timing
  • Transparency of policies
  • Public awareness raising

12
Country Experience
13
Government responseprice-based policies
  • Incorrect assumptions about size and duration of
    oil price increase led several governments,
    including reformist economies, to rapidly
    re-introduce price controls
  • Magnitude and duration of price shock initially
    under-estimated
  • Thailand Planned for 2 months duration at 128
    million vs. 19 months at 2.2 billion
  • Initial government reaction re-adopt price
    control
  • Suspend formula-based automatic pricing
    mechanismsChile, India, Pakistan
  • Impose price caps or freezesArgentina, Chile,
    Honduras, Pakistan, Thailand

14
High total cost of price control
  • Government budget
  • Country China Egypt India Indonesia
    Malaysia Morocco
  • Billion US 1.2 7.2 0.8
    9.9 1.4 0.4
  • Year 2005 FY06 FY06 2005
    2004 2004
  • Oil companies (example costs)
  • Country Argentina Brazil
    India Nigeria
  • Billion US 0.2
    0.84 9.0 0.1
  • Time period Jan 03-Apr 04 Jan-Jul 05
    FY06 Jul 2005
  • Oil stabilization fund
  • Country Chile Thailand
  • Billion US 0.2 2.2
  • Source Copper fund Bonds and bank loans
  • Tax reductions, exemptions
  • Many Countries

15
Oil price stabilization fund
  • Abandoned and not reactivated
  • India, Philippines
  • Depleted before 2005
  • Chile transfer 200 million from copper fund
  • Morocco
  • Thailand (before 2004)
  • Ethiopia (during 2004)
  • Operational
  • Chile, Malawi, Morocco, Thailand
  • Talk of introducing or reactivating a
    stabilization fund
  • Nigeria, Senegal, Zambia
  • Key issues Is oil price mean-reverting?
    How long will it take before the fund
    becomes self-financing?

16
Oil price stabilization fund Illustration
Transfer into and out of fund based on average
price between 1990 and 1999 daily consumption
500 barrels
17
Smuggling and adulteration
  • Substantial fiscal implications (ex. Cambodia)
  • Pricing principles that give incentives for
    smuggling/adulteration entrench criminal elements
  • Opec boys in DRC
  • Murder of IOC official in India in November 2005
  • Smuggling and adulteration make fair competition
    difficult
  • Adulteration can make implementation of other
    regulations difficult
  • Euro III and IV and diesel adulteration in India

18
Reducing consumption
  • Economic pricing of fuels including externalities
    addresses optimal consumption
  • Few countries have announced systematic and
    policies to save energy, most policies
    exhortatory
  • Some governments have mandated or offered
    incentives for reductions in energy use
  • Philippines active and aggressive promotion by
    President
  • Thailand mandatory limits on activities
  • Vietnam all state agencies to cut gasoline use
    by 10
  • Indonesia all government agencies to implement
    energy-saving measures
  • Honduras state of emergency

19
Squeezing oil companies India
  • Burden sharing oil companies 51, government
    36, consumers 13 in FY06
  • IOC, HPCL, BPCL, and IBP all reported first-ever
    losses in 20042005. Their under-recoveries are
    expected to reach 9 billion in FY06.
  • ONGC, OIL, and GAIL in upstream are required to
    contribute 2.2 billion toward the shortfall
  • 2.6 billion oil bonds issued in 2006

20
Biofuel programs
  • China ethanol 20 of gasoline consumed contained
    ethanol in 2005
  • Colombia 10 ethanol in gasoline
  • India 5 ethanol in certain states if ethanol is
    not more expensive, biodiesel purchase policy
  • Indonesia 3 of energy from plant-based fuels by
    2025
  • Malaysia biodiesel from palm oil, trial underway
  • Philippines coco-biodiesel, ethanol
  • Thailand 10 ethanol in gasoline

21
Compensation schemes
  • Cash transfer
  • 29 per household to 2.2 million poor households
    in Chile
  • 10 per month to 17.8 million poor households in
    Indonesia
  • Inadequate database on the poor
  • Change to conditional transfer in 2007
  • 1.2-2.5 per month to the poor in some provinces
    in China
  • Education
  • Ghana (elementary and secondary school fee
    waiver)
  • Indonesia (elementary school fee waiver,
    scholarships, free books, higher teacher
    salaries)
  • Health
  • Ghana (spending on primary health care)
  • Indonesia (free medical treatment at some clinics
    and hospitals)
  • Higher pension, minimum wage, civil service
    salaries
  • Thailand

22
Transparency of compensation policies
  • Is compensation easy to verify?
  • Universal schemes more easily verifiable by
    individual citizens
  • Location-specific projects more difficult
  • Road construction
  • Can benefits be felt immediately?
  • Is the delivery scheme designed to minimize
    diversion?

23
Winning public buy-in
  • Perceived legitimacy, popularity, and credibility
    of government
  • Credible compensation scheme
  • Historical record on effective delivery with
    tangible results
  • Strategic timing
  • Post election (Ghana, Indonesia, Thailand)
  • After harvest (Morocco), beginning of Ramadan
    (Indonesia)
  • Public information
  • Ghana Identification of winners and losers,
    impact analysis, and design of compensation
    schemes informed by PSIA, followed by public
    debates on TV and radio

24
Public buy-in Indonesia, January 2003
The fuel demonstrations are symbolic of a wider
public dissatisfaction with Ms Megawati's
government, and with the corruption and
inefficiency that still permeates political and
bureaucratic life in Indonesia The subsidy
reductions stand against the background of other
decisions that appeared to favor powerful
interests. In November, the government sought to
relieve five of the countrys largest debtors
from repayment obligations the incident has
reinforced the view that wealthy, influential
figures continue to receive special
treatmentwhile average Indonesians are faced
with price rises they can ill afford.
Economist Intelligence Unit - Business Asia, 27
January 2003
25
Public buy-inIndonesia October 2005
A poll conducted in mid-December put President
Susilo's job approval rating at 56, a decline
from 63 in September. The President won respect
across the country for his integrity, as well as
performance in the areas of legal, security and
social welfare ever since he took office 15
months ago. Jakarta Post, 30 Dec. 2005
26
Concluding remarks
  • There is no dominating policy for amelioration,
    and governments will need a combination of
    policies, each making small contribution.
  • Over medium term, governments should let fuel
    prices rise to market levels, and let market
    forces drive fuel consumption.
  • Protection given to domestic refineries, poorly
    maintained infrastructure, and inefficient
    operations all increase supply costs.
  • Greater efforts should be made to save energy,
    particularly where fuel substitution
    opportunities are limited.

27
Concluding remarks
  • Governments fiscal position, political support
    it enjoys, and history of governance all affect
    success of policies.
  • Given oil consumption growth in transport,
    efforts at public transport reform, traffic
    management, and improving road infrastructure,
    all of which can reduce fuel consumption, merit
    serious attention.
  • Fuel switching among poor households from solid
    fuels to cleaner commercial energy will be more
    challenging than ever before.
  • Recognize the inefficiency of petroleum
    sector-specific intervention, and strengthen
    delivery mechanisms for general assistance
    targeting the poor.
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