At $350 b, India’s fossil fuel sop ‘among top 5 in the world
- August 25, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
No Comments
At $350 b, India’s fossil fuel sop ‘among top 5 in the world
Subject: Economy
Section: Fiscal Policy
Context: India ranks fourth among the top five nations in fossil fuel subsidies with around $350 billion (over ₹28-lakh crore)
Key Points:
- According to a working paper of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) India is ranked 4th in terms of fossil fuel subsidies.
- China is at the top, followed by the US and Russia. The European Union and Japan share the fifth spot.
- Globally, total fossil fuel subsidies amounted to $7 trillion in 2022, equivalent to nearly 7.1 per cent of global GDP.
- Here total subsidy means sum of explicit subsidies (undercharging for the supply costs of fossil fuels) and implicit subsidies (undercharging for environmental costs and forgone consumption tax revenues).
- The full gap between efficient prices (the sum of supply, environmental, and other costs) and retail prices multiplied by consumption equals the total fossil fuel subsidy.
- In India, explicit or direct subsidy is given for domestic LPG under a scheme called ‘Ujjawala’ while some transport subsidy is also give to take various types of fuel to remote locations.
- The paper said sum of both implicit and explicit subsidy in India is estimated at $346 billion which is over 10 per cent of the GDP.
- Providing a blueprint to lower subsidy, the paper said fully reforming fossil fuel prices by removing explicit fuel subsidies and imposing corrective taxes such as a carbon tax would reduce global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 43 percent below ‘business as usual’ levels in 2030.
- Benefits of cutting fuel subsidies?
- Full fuel price reform would also raise substantial revenues, worth about 3.6 per cent of global GDP.
- These revenues could be used to cut more burdensome taxes such as on those labour, help with debt sustainability, or fund productive investments.
- Further, fuel price reform would avert about 1.6 million pre-mature deaths per year from local air pollution by 2030. Reforming fossil fuel subsidies is in countries’ own interest, even when excluding climate benefits.
Explicit and Implicit Fuel Subsidies Explicit Subsidies:
Implicit subsidies:
Both types of subsidies can have significant economic, social, and environmental implications. While explicit subsidies directly impact government budgets, implicit subsidies can influence market behaviors and environmental sustainability in less obvious ways. Note: Externality refers to the unintended impact of economic activities on the environment, where the costs or benefits are not fully reflected in market prices. |