Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term

This paper examines the short- and long-run economic impact of Egypt's energy subsidy reform in July 2014 (without and without compensating transfers for the bottom 40 percent of the income distribution) and the decline in global energy prices...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Griffin, Peter, Laursen, Thomas, Robertson, James
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
GAS
TAX
LNG
OIL
GDP
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25946391/egypt-guiding-reform-energy-subsidies-long-term
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23890
id okr-10986-23890
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-238902021-04-23T14:04:18Z Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term Griffin, Peter Laursen, Thomas Robertson, James SANITATION EMPLOYMENT NATURAL GAS OUTPUT FUEL SUBSIDIES GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES POWER PLANTS OIL PRICE ADVERSE IMPACTS INCOME ACTIVITIES GENERATION REAL GDP BALANCE OF PAYMENTS EXPORTS ELASTICITY GAS PRICES DOMESTIC NATURAL GAS GASOLINE ENERGY PRODUCTS ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS INCENTIVES EQUILIBRIUM GAS SUBSIDY PRICE TAX INPUTS OIL PRODUCTION PAYMENTS DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY TRADE BALANCE LNG OIL PRICES PETROLEUM TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY NATURAL GAS PRICES COSTS OIL POWER GENERATION ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS HIGHER ENERGY PRICES TRANSPORT POWER SECTOR REFINED PETROLEUM PRODUCTS MOBILITY BASE YEAR CRUDE OIL PRODUCTION OIL PRODUCTS WATER HIGH ENERGY BUDGET DEFICITS TOTAL COSTS STATIC ANALYSIS PRICE SUBSIDIES SUBSIDIES TAXES PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH CONSUMPTION VALUE ADDED TRANSPORTATION ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE CAPITAL WAGES INTERNATIONAL TRADE ELECTRIC POWER BALANCE PRICE ELASTICITIES OIL PRODUCER ELECTRIC POWER GENERATION UTILITIES VALUE WAGE RATES POWER ELECTRICITY CEMENT ELASTICITIES MACROECONOMICS TRADE DEFICIT ECONOMIC SECTORS DRY NATURAL GAS GAS PRODUCER ELECTRICITY GENERATION PRICE CHANGES ENERGY EXTRACTION AGRICULTURE CONSUMERS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY OIL PRODUCERS COST OF ENERGY MEASUREMENT GAS OUTPUT ENERGY USE DYNAMIC ANALYSIS BENCHMARK ENERGY PRICES FIXED PRICES TAX REVENUE ELECTRICITY PRICES CAPITAL USE TRADE NATURAL GAS GDP GOODS GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES GROWTH RATE OIL EXPORTERS INVESTMENT TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH CONTROLLED PRICES DOMESTIC ENERGY ADVERSE IMPACT COAL DIESEL FUEL CRUDE OIL FUEL FUEL OIL INVESTMENTS PETROLEUM PRODUCTS TRANSPORT COSTS FULL EMPLOYMENT DIESEL MACROECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ENERGY COSTS PRICES APPROACH PRODUCTION COSTS ENERGY DEVELOPMENT POLICY INCOME GROUPS NATURAL GAS PRICING This paper examines the short- and long-run economic impact of Egypt's energy subsidy reform in July 2014 (without and without compensating transfers for the bottom 40 percent of the income distribution) and the decline in global energy prices, as well as the long-run impact of phasing out the energy subsidies over a 5 year period. The analysis uses a Computable General Equilibrium model with 56 productive sectors, including 11 energy subsectors. The short-run analysis employs a two-stage factor market adjustment, with wages first fixed and then flexible. The long-run analysis is run in a recursive dynamic mode, capturing the impact of improved productivity and increased investment resulting from more efficient allocation of resources and reduction in government deficits. In the short run, the 2014 reforms lead to slightly lower consumption while investment increases strongly and production shifts from highly subsidized energy-intensive sectors such as energy, water and sanitation, and transport to other sectors (notably construction). The impact on overall consumer prices is limited. In the longer run, real GDP growth increases by about one percentage point relative to the baseline before the 2014 reform. 2016-03-09T16:35:27Z 2016-03-09T16:35:27Z 2016-02 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25946391/egypt-guiding-reform-energy-subsidies-long-term http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23890 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7571 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Middle East and North Africa Egypt, Arab Republic of
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic SANITATION
EMPLOYMENT
NATURAL GAS OUTPUT
FUEL SUBSIDIES
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
POWER PLANTS
OIL PRICE
ADVERSE IMPACTS
INCOME
ACTIVITIES
GENERATION
REAL GDP
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
EXPORTS
ELASTICITY
GAS PRICES
DOMESTIC NATURAL GAS
GASOLINE
ENERGY PRODUCTS
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
INCENTIVES
EQUILIBRIUM
GAS
SUBSIDY
PRICE
TAX
INPUTS
OIL PRODUCTION
PAYMENTS
DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY
TRADE BALANCE
LNG
OIL PRICES
PETROLEUM
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
NATURAL GAS PRICES
COSTS
OIL
POWER GENERATION
ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS
HIGHER ENERGY PRICES
TRANSPORT
POWER SECTOR
REFINED PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
MOBILITY
BASE YEAR
CRUDE OIL PRODUCTION
OIL PRODUCTS
WATER
HIGH ENERGY
BUDGET DEFICITS
TOTAL COSTS
STATIC ANALYSIS
PRICE SUBSIDIES
SUBSIDIES
TAXES
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
CONSUMPTION
VALUE ADDED
TRANSPORTATION
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
CAPITAL
WAGES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
ELECTRIC POWER
BALANCE
PRICE ELASTICITIES
OIL PRODUCER
ELECTRIC POWER GENERATION
UTILITIES
VALUE
WAGE RATES
POWER
ELECTRICITY
CEMENT
ELASTICITIES
MACROECONOMICS
TRADE DEFICIT
ECONOMIC SECTORS
DRY NATURAL GAS
GAS PRODUCER
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
PRICE CHANGES
ENERGY EXTRACTION
AGRICULTURE
CONSUMERS
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
OIL PRODUCERS
COST OF ENERGY
MEASUREMENT
GAS OUTPUT
ENERGY USE
DYNAMIC ANALYSIS
BENCHMARK
ENERGY PRICES
FIXED PRICES
TAX REVENUE
ELECTRICITY PRICES
CAPITAL USE
TRADE
NATURAL GAS
GDP
GOODS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
GROWTH RATE
OIL EXPORTERS
INVESTMENT
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
CONTROLLED PRICES
DOMESTIC ENERGY
ADVERSE IMPACT
COAL
DIESEL FUEL
CRUDE OIL
FUEL
FUEL OIL
INVESTMENTS
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
TRANSPORT COSTS
FULL EMPLOYMENT
DIESEL
MACROECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ENERGY COSTS
PRICES
APPROACH
PRODUCTION COSTS
ENERGY
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
INCOME GROUPS
NATURAL GAS PRICING
spellingShingle SANITATION
EMPLOYMENT
NATURAL GAS OUTPUT
FUEL SUBSIDIES
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
POWER PLANTS
OIL PRICE
ADVERSE IMPACTS
INCOME
ACTIVITIES
GENERATION
REAL GDP
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
EXPORTS
ELASTICITY
GAS PRICES
DOMESTIC NATURAL GAS
GASOLINE
ENERGY PRODUCTS
ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
INCENTIVES
EQUILIBRIUM
GAS
SUBSIDY
PRICE
TAX
INPUTS
OIL PRODUCTION
PAYMENTS
DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY
TRADE BALANCE
LNG
OIL PRICES
PETROLEUM
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
NATURAL GAS PRICES
COSTS
OIL
POWER GENERATION
ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS
HIGHER ENERGY PRICES
TRANSPORT
POWER SECTOR
REFINED PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
MOBILITY
BASE YEAR
CRUDE OIL PRODUCTION
OIL PRODUCTS
WATER
HIGH ENERGY
BUDGET DEFICITS
TOTAL COSTS
STATIC ANALYSIS
PRICE SUBSIDIES
SUBSIDIES
TAXES
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
CONSUMPTION
VALUE ADDED
TRANSPORTATION
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
CAPITAL
WAGES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
ELECTRIC POWER
BALANCE
PRICE ELASTICITIES
OIL PRODUCER
ELECTRIC POWER GENERATION
UTILITIES
VALUE
WAGE RATES
POWER
ELECTRICITY
CEMENT
ELASTICITIES
MACROECONOMICS
TRADE DEFICIT
ECONOMIC SECTORS
DRY NATURAL GAS
GAS PRODUCER
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
PRICE CHANGES
ENERGY EXTRACTION
AGRICULTURE
CONSUMERS
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
OIL PRODUCERS
COST OF ENERGY
MEASUREMENT
GAS OUTPUT
ENERGY USE
DYNAMIC ANALYSIS
BENCHMARK
ENERGY PRICES
FIXED PRICES
TAX REVENUE
ELECTRICITY PRICES
CAPITAL USE
TRADE
NATURAL GAS
GDP
GOODS
GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES
GROWTH RATE
OIL EXPORTERS
INVESTMENT
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
CONTROLLED PRICES
DOMESTIC ENERGY
ADVERSE IMPACT
COAL
DIESEL FUEL
CRUDE OIL
FUEL
FUEL OIL
INVESTMENTS
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
TRANSPORT COSTS
FULL EMPLOYMENT
DIESEL
MACROECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ENERGY COSTS
PRICES
APPROACH
PRODUCTION COSTS
ENERGY
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
INCOME GROUPS
NATURAL GAS PRICING
Griffin, Peter
Laursen, Thomas
Robertson, James
Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Egypt, Arab Republic of
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7571
description This paper examines the short- and long-run economic impact of Egypt's energy subsidy reform in July 2014 (without and without compensating transfers for the bottom 40 percent of the income distribution) and the decline in global energy prices, as well as the long-run impact of phasing out the energy subsidies over a 5 year period. The analysis uses a Computable General Equilibrium model with 56 productive sectors, including 11 energy subsectors. The short-run analysis employs a two-stage factor market adjustment, with wages first fixed and then flexible. The long-run analysis is run in a recursive dynamic mode, capturing the impact of improved productivity and increased investment resulting from more efficient allocation of resources and reduction in government deficits. In the short run, the 2014 reforms lead to slightly lower consumption while investment increases strongly and production shifts from highly subsidized energy-intensive sectors such as energy, water and sanitation, and transport to other sectors (notably construction). The impact on overall consumer prices is limited. In the longer run, real GDP growth increases by about one percentage point relative to the baseline before the 2014 reform.
format Working Paper
author Griffin, Peter
Laursen, Thomas
Robertson, James
author_facet Griffin, Peter
Laursen, Thomas
Robertson, James
author_sort Griffin, Peter
title Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term
title_short Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term
title_full Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term
title_fullStr Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term
title_full_unstemmed Egypt : Guiding Reform of Energy Subsidies Long-Term
title_sort egypt : guiding reform of energy subsidies long-term
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25946391/egypt-guiding-reform-energy-subsidies-long-term
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23890
_version_ 1764455083440865280