Fuel and Food Price Subsidies - Issues and Reform Options

Government price subsidies are pervasive in developed, emerging, and low-income countries.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2008 Issue 045
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Business and Economics , Nature , Inflation , Economics- Macroeconomics , Public Finance , Natural Resources , PP , subsidy reform , price subsidy , country authorities , OECD country , fuel subsidy , world price , low income , Income , Consumption , Inflation , Energy subsidies , Non-renewable resources , Global

Summary

Government price subsidies are pervasive in developed, emerging, and low-income countries. A subsidy is a form of government intervention resulting in a deviation of an actual price facing consumers and producers from a specified benchmark price. Subsidies affect consumption and production patterns as well as the distribution of resources, with important implications for the budget, expenditure composition, and long-term growth. They can and often do involve fiscal costs, but not all affect government fiscal accounts in the same way. Price subsidies have spillover effects onto prices and quantities in domestic, regional, or global markets. This paper discusses the key issues and policy options in the reform of subsidies for fossil fuels and selected food commodities, and their implications for the work of the Fund.