Publication:
Energy Subsidies Reform in Jordan: Welfare Implications of Different Scenarios

dc.contributor.author Aziz, Atamanov
dc.contributor.author Jellema, Jon
dc.contributor.author Serajuddin, Umar
dc.date.accessioned 2015-06-24T15:29:45Z
dc.date.available 2015-06-24T15:29:45Z
dc.date.issued 2015-05-31
dc.description.abstract As the Arab Spring unfolded and political unrest spread across the Arab world, Jordan faced an adverse economy as well. Fundamental to the economic challenge was high and rising energy prices, already heavily subsidized for consumers. With the government intent on staving off emerging political unrest through a series of measures, buffering consumers from increased energy prices being a key action, fiscal costs mounted. By 2012, subsidies on petroleum products alone were about 2.8 percent of GDP and 8.8 percent of government expenditures. At the same time, political unrest disrupted the supply of natural gas from Egypt and Jordan abruptly had to switch to using imported oil products (heavy fuel oil and diesel) to produce electricity. Consequently, the cost of producing electricity increased several folds. As the increased cost was not passed on to the consumers, National Electric Power company (NEPCO), bore all the increases in fuel prices and accumulate debt as a result. At approximately 17 percent of government expenditures and 5.5 percent of GDP in 2011, this was twice the amount of the petroleum subsidies. The chapter is organized as follows. Section two traces the evolution of subsidies in Jordan in recent times. The distributional impacts of reform would depend on how important the subsidized items are to consumers in terms of their expenditures on those items. Section three discusses this question from the perspective of richer and poorer households. The distributional impacts of reform would of course not only depend on how much consumers spend on the subsidized items but also on the extent of price changes. Sections four and five simulate direct and indirect impacts of potential reform scenarios across the income distribution. From this discussion, in section six the chapter moves onto considering how reforms are weighed down by vexing political economy constraints. In MENA countries, universal subsidies have been in place as part of the government’s role in ensuring stability in the lives of the people and doing away with them is not straightforward. en
dc.identifier http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24600026/energy-subsidies-reform-jordan-welfare-implications-different-scenarios
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22051
dc.language English
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
dc.relation.ispartofseries Poverty and Equity Global Practice Working Paper No. 035
dc.rights CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder World Bank
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.subject GROWTH RATES
dc.subject FUEL SUBSIDIES
dc.subject RETAIL PRICE
dc.subject GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
dc.subject HEAVY OIL
dc.subject PRICE INCREASES
dc.subject KILOWATT-HOUR
dc.subject ELECTRICITY TARIFF
dc.subject INCOME
dc.subject INTEREST
dc.subject POWER STATIONS
dc.subject PRIVATIZATION
dc.subject GENERATION
dc.subject INCOME GROUP
dc.subject GDP PER CAPITA
dc.subject ELECTRICITY SYSTEM
dc.subject ELASTICITY
dc.subject PRODUCER PRICES
dc.subject GASOLINE CONSUMPTION
dc.subject POLITICAL ECONOMY
dc.subject GASOLINE
dc.subject ENERGY PRODUCTS
dc.subject WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
dc.subject WELFARE
dc.subject DISTRIBUTION
dc.subject PRICING
dc.subject GAS
dc.subject SUBSIDY
dc.subject PRICE
dc.subject INPUTS
dc.subject DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY
dc.subject POWER MIX
dc.subject INFLATION
dc.subject ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
dc.subject RETAIL
dc.subject TRENDS
dc.subject SAFETY NETS
dc.subject OIL PRICES
dc.subject PETROLEUM
dc.subject SAVINGS
dc.subject CURRENCY
dc.subject OIL
dc.subject DEMAND ELASTICITY
dc.subject FOOD PRICE
dc.subject PRODUCTS
dc.subject OIL PRODUCTS
dc.subject OPTIONS
dc.subject WATER
dc.subject DEBT
dc.subject FUEL PRODUCTS
dc.subject FISCAL CONSOLIDATION
dc.subject PRODUCER PRICE INCREASE
dc.subject SOCIAL PROTECTION
dc.subject POWER COMPANY
dc.subject PRICE ELASTICITY
dc.subject PRODUCT
dc.subject PRICE SUBSIDIES
dc.subject FUELS
dc.subject GASOLINE PRICES
dc.subject SUBSIDIES
dc.subject POWER PRODUCERS
dc.subject GASOLINE PRICE
dc.subject PRICE CHANGE
dc.subject EXPENDITURE
dc.subject PETROLEUM PRICE
dc.subject POLITICAL UNREST
dc.subject CONSUMPTION
dc.subject DATA AVAILABILITY
dc.subject SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
dc.subject GOVERNMENT BUDGET
dc.subject BALANCE
dc.subject ELECTRIC POWER
dc.subject PRICE ADJUSTMENTS
dc.subject FUTURE
dc.subject MARKET PRICES
dc.subject POWER
dc.subject ELECTRICITY
dc.subject PRODUCER PRICE
dc.subject GAS SUPPLY
dc.subject PRICE SUPPORT
dc.subject DEMAND
dc.subject ELECTRICITY GENERATION
dc.subject PRICE CHANGES
dc.subject EXPENDITURES
dc.subject CONSUMERS
dc.subject AGRICULTURE
dc.subject HEAVY FUEL OIL
dc.subject INCOMES
dc.subject PETROLEUM GAS
dc.subject ELECTRICITY TARIFFS
dc.subject FUEL PRICES
dc.subject SALE
dc.subject SHARES
dc.subject MARKET
dc.subject ENERGY PRICES
dc.subject PRICE INCREASE
dc.subject PETROLEUM SECTOR
dc.subject SOLAR POWER
dc.subject OUTPUT
dc.subject ELECTRICITY PRICES
dc.subject NATURAL GAS
dc.subject GDP
dc.subject GOODS
dc.subject INTERNATIONAL MARKET
dc.subject SHARE
dc.subject ELECTRICITY PRICE
dc.subject ADVERSE IMPACT
dc.subject FINANCIAL RISKS
dc.subject TARIFF
dc.subject SUPPLY
dc.subject FUEL
dc.subject FUEL OIL
dc.subject GINI COEFFICIENT
dc.subject AVAILABILITY
dc.subject HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES
dc.subject COMMUNICATION
dc.subject COSTS SAVINGS
dc.subject COMMODITIES
dc.subject PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
dc.subject FOOD PRICES
dc.subject CONSUMPTION LEVELS
dc.subject COMMODITY PRICES
dc.subject DIESEL
dc.subject KEROSENE
dc.subject PRICE OF GASOLINE
dc.subject COMMODITY
dc.subject PRODUCERS OF PETROLEUM
dc.subject PRICES
dc.subject APPROACH
dc.subject SPREAD
dc.subject ENERGY
dc.title Energy Subsidies Reform in Jordan en
dc.title.subtitle Welfare Implications of Different Scenarios en
dc.type Report en
dc.type Rapport fr
dc.type Informe es
dspace.entity.type Publication
okr.date.disclosure 2015-06-09
okr.doctype Economic & Sector Work
okr.doctype Economic & Sector Work :: Other Poverty Study
okr.docurl http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24600026/energy-subsidies-reform-jordan-welfare-implications-different-scenarios
okr.globalpractice Poverty
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum 090224b082f08d04_1_0
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum 24600026
okr.identifier.report 97159
okr.identifier.report 125605
okr.language.supported en
okr.pdfurl http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2015/06/09/090224b082f08d04/1_0/Rendered/PDF/Energy0subsidi00different0scenarios.pdf en
okr.region.administrative Middle East and North Africa
okr.region.country Jordan
okr.sector Public Administration, Law, and Justice
okr.theme Economic management :: Other economic management
okr.theme Public sector governance :: Tax policy and administration
okr.theme Social protection and risk management :: Poverty strategy, analysis and monitoring
okr.topic Energy :: Energy Consumption
okr.topic Energy :: Energy Policies & Economics
okr.topic Energy :: Energy Production and Transportation
okr.topic Energy :: Energy and Poverty Alleviation
okr.topic Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Taxation & Subsidies
okr.topic Poverty Reduction :: Conditional Cash Transfers
okr.topic Poverty Reduction :: Equity and Development
okr.topic Poverty Reduction :: Services & Transfers to Poor
okr.unit Poverty - GP (GPVDR)
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