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The Impact of Electricity Tariff Reforms and Alternative Mitigating Measures David Coady PSIA Group Fiscal Affairs Department International Monetary Fund
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Based on background paper for an IMF Selected Issues chapter 2005 “The welfare impacts of electricity tariff reforms and alternative compensating mechanisms: Evidence from Tajikistan” (with Franziska Gassmann and Irina Klytchnikova)
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Background I Tariff subsidies common in transition and developing countries >10% GDP in Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan 3-4% GDP in Bulgaria, Georgia Adverse implications for financial position of state-owned enterprises and investments in capacity and distribution systems Increase in tariffs viewed as key component of sector reform strategy
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Background II Price increases can have substantial adverse impact on low-income households Often viewed as an important political barrier to reform agenda Emphasis put on alternative approaches to mitigating adverse impacts of reform Use of lifeline tariffs Use of targeted safety net programs
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Structure of Presentation Policy background in Tajikistan 2004 Tariff structure, energy patterns, reforms Methodology used in the analysis Magnitude and distribution of impact of tariff reforms on households Targeted social protection programs Existing and potential Comparison of cost-effectiveness of lifeline tariffs with mitigation through targeted transfers
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Policy Background in Tajikistan 2004 Single state-owned enterprise dominating generation and distribution (Barki Tajik) Universal household access to network but supply problems common Cross-subsidization of residential consumers by industry Large subsidies to “privileged groups” and non- payment of bills Average tariffs substantially below cost-recovery tariffs WB estimated subsidy at 19% GDP 2003 Average tariff only 25% of cost-recovery level (6.125dr/kWh)
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Methodology Identify existing tariff structure and reforms Use household survey data to analyze electricity expenditures and tariff patterns Tajikistan Living Standards Survey 2003 Energy Household Survey 2004 Apply existing tariff structure to “back out” electricity quantities Apply “new” tariff to identify impact on households Impact on low-income groups and alternative mitigating measures
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Evolution of Tariff Structure
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Electricity Consumption Patterns 2003
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Alternative Tariff Levels and Structures
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Impact of Alternative Tariff Structures
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Distribution of Implicit Subsidy
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Existing Social Protection Programs Social Pensions Paid to those unable to work and not entitled to social insurance pension (pensioners, disabled, deceased earner) Cash Compensation Program (CCP) Reformed program introduced in 2000 targeted to poorest 20% children aged 6-15 years in each school (sharing, national 2002) School committees chose eligible students and deliver transfers without explicit criteria Energy Compensation Mechanism (ECM) Introduced in Jan2003 with tariff increases In principle in-kind means tested but in practice qualitative assessment by village committee Discount for consumption up to 100-150 kWh per month given to electricity company based on village-level records
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Alternative Compensation Mechanisms Identify alternatives in household survey data (TLSS2003) Cash Compensation Program Hypothetical Proxy-Means Program Evaluate targeting performance Ability to transfer benefits to large proportion of low-income households (coverage) without high leakage to others Choose “poorest” 20% based on predicted probability of receiving program
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Coverage and Leakage Rates
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Alternative Mitigation Strategies Comparing three reform alternatives Instead of moving to cost-recovery tariffs for all households, move to structure of Scenario 4 Move to cost-recovery tariffs and compensate households using budgetary savings relative to Scenario 4 via CCP Move to cost-recovery tariffs and compensate households using budgetary savings relative to Scenario 4 via PMP All alternatives have same fiscal impact Under Scenario 4, government finances subsidies from budget Under transfer programs, government covers transfer bill
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Net Impact of Alternative Measures
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Policy Implications Electricity tariff subsidies are not likely to be a cost effective approach to protecting low-income households Developing more targeted compensation mechanisms will substantially reduce the fiscal cost of mitigation (for all structural reforms) Targeted transfers can be focused on different populations (infants, children, adults, elderly etc) and conditioned to both generate physical/human capital accumulation and improve targeting Measures should be integrated into a comprehensive social protection strategy to ensure consistent targeting, avoid duplication and decrease administrative costs
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