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Reform of the Fiscal and Subsidy Regime for the Petroleum Sector

Sebastian Morris (), Samir Barua and Jayanth Varma

Working Papers from eSocialSciences

Abstract: Reform of the oil sector is long overdue. The problems in the sector emanate from the structure of central taxes and the system of subsidisation through prices. Solutions to the problems necessarily have to address both tax and subsidy simultaneously. The social losses include, misuse / wasteful use of scarce petroleum resources, diversion, adulteration, other avoidable negative externalities, improper substitution between products, tax arbitrage, distortion of consumer preferences and input choices of industries, and international cross hauling of petroleum. Nearly all these costs, and problems arise not because of subsidisation per se but due to the use of varying retail prices that are used to subsidise. Prices for the same product vary for different consumers besides. They also vary across products. These tax /subsidy variations are the root cause of nearly all problems in the sector. Autonomous price variations (i.e. those resulting from the actions of firms (under a regime of non- distortionary subsidies) would be small and not subject to ‘arbitrage’ i.e. to the realisation of rents through diversion and adulteration. [Working Paper No. 2010-03-03]

Keywords: Reform; oil sector; subsidisation; subsidy; externalities; arbitrage’ (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010-07
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene and nep-pbe
Note: Institutional Papers
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