cover image: Can Energy Subsidies Help Slay Inflation?

20.500.12592/nzs7pdp

Can Energy Subsidies Help Slay Inflation?

5 Apr 2024

Many countries have used energy subsidies to cushion the effects of high energy prices on households and firms. After documenting the transmission of oil supply shocks empirically in the United States and the Euro Area, we use a New Keynesian modeling framework to study the conditions under which these policies can curb inflation. We first consider a closed economy model to show that a consumer subsidy may be counterproductive, especially as an inflation-fighting tool, when applied globally or in a segmented market, at least under empirically plausible conditions about wage-setting. We find more scope for energy subsidies to reduce core inflation and stimulate demand if introduced by a small group of countries which collectively do not have much influence on global energy prices. However, the conditions under which consumer energy subsidies reduce inflation are still quite restrictive, and this type of policy may well be counterproductive if the resulting increase in external debt is high enough to trigger sizeable exchange rate depreciation. Such effects are more likely in emerging markets with shallow foreign exchange markets. If the primary goal of using fiscal measures in response to spikes in energy prices is to shield vulnerable households, then targeted transfers are much more efficient as they achieve their goals at lower fiscal cost and transmit less to core inflation.

Authors

Christopher J. Erceg, Marcin Kolasa, Jesper Lindé, Andrea Pescatori

Format
Paper
Frequency
regular
ISBN
9798400273445
ISSN
1018-5941
Pages
79
Published in
United States of America
Series
Working Paper No. 2024/081
StockNumber
WPIEA2024081