How should governments respond to energy price crises? a horse-race between fiscal policies

Geoffroy Duparc-Portier*, Gioele Figus

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
40 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

This paper compares the welfare and distributional implications of fiscal policies aimed at reducing a sudden and significant increase in the price of energy. A dynamic computable general equilibrium model with households disaggregated by income groups is used to compare the effectiveness of five energy price-reducing fiscal policies. The policies are assessed under two financing options, pure government debt and a mix of debt and windfall taxation on energy companies. Results from simulations demonstrate that targeted demand-side policies are more effective at reducing overall energy-driven inflation and increasing welfare. Supply-side policies and mixed demand and supply policies achieve a smaller reduction in the consumer price index but are more expansionary. Financing the policies partly through windfall taxation does not impact the ranking of policies but it delivers better distributional outcomes and higher welfare. The results motivate the use of windfall taxation if governments face high interest rates on debt financing and/ or if households care sufficiently about the provision of public goods. The optimal policy is likely a mix of supply-side measures such as production tax reductions or general price subsidies and either targeted energy price subsidies or targeted income subsidies financed where possible through windfall taxation.
Original languageEnglish
Article number107284
Number of pages10
JournalEnergy Economics
Volume130
Early online date15 Jan 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Feb 2024

Funding

Geoffroy Duparc-Portier acknowledges funding from the UK Economics and Social Research Council (ESRC) , [project number 2277374 ], Scottish Graduate School in Social Science , [grant number ES/P000681/1 ]. Gioele Figus and Geoffroy Duparc-Portier acknowledge funding from the ESRC, Centre for Inclusive Trade Policy , [grant number ES/W002434/1 ]. The authors are grateful for the useful comments by Dr Grant Allan, Dr Kevin Connolly and Dr Alex Dickson, University of Strathclyde, and the useful questions and comments of participants of the 26th Annual Conference in Global Economic Analysis (June 2023), the Royal Economic Society PhD Conference (June 2023) the 29th International Input-Output Association Conference (June 2023) and the EcoMod2023 International Conference on Economic Modeling and Data Science (July 2023). The authors are grateful for the comments of two anonymous referees. Geoffroy Duparc-Portier acknowledges funding from the UK Economics and Social Research Council (ESRC), [project number 2277374], Scottish Graduate School in Social Science, [grant number ES/P000681/1]. Gioele Figus and Geoffroy Duparc-Portier acknowledge funding from the ESRC, Centre for Inclusive Trade Policy, [grant number ES/W002434/1].

Keywords

  • energy crisis
  • fiscal policy
  • income distribution
  • computable general equilibrium
  • welfare
  • windfall tax

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'How should governments respond to energy price crises? a horse-race between fiscal policies'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this