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The economic cost of fuel price subsidies in Ghana

Posted on:2016-07-25Degree:M.SType:Thesis
University:Michigan State UniversityCandidate:Ofori, Roland OduroFull Text:PDF
GTID:2479390017981842Subject:Economics
Abstract/Summary:
I adapt the Harberger formula for deadweight loss to develop approximations for the deadweight loss created by multiple fuel price subsidies. I also estimate the own-price, cross-price, and income elasticities of demand for gasoline and diesel in Africa. I use data on fuel prices and sales in combination with my formulas and elasticity estimates to calculate the deadweight loss of fuel price subsidies in Ghana from 2009 to 2014. I show that the average efficiency cost of the gasoline and diesel price subsidies in Ghana is 0.8% of fuel price subsidy transfers. This result stresses the futility of basing subsidy reforms on economic efficiency losses, which are relatively small due to very inelastic energy demand, and the need for such reforms to be motivated by the poor-targeting of subsidies to low-income households and the impact of subsidies on government debt-financing.
Keywords/Search Tags:Fuel price, Subsidies, Deadweight loss
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