A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North Africa

Energy subsidies are among the most pervasive and controversial fiscal policy tools used in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). In a region with few functioning social welfare systems, subsidised energy prices continue to form an important social safety net, albeit a highly costly and inefficie...

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Main Authors: Laura El-Katiri, Bassam Fattouh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut de Hautes Études Internationales et du Développement 2017-02-01
Series:Revue Internationale de Politique de Développement
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/poldev/2267
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author Laura El-Katiri
Bassam Fattouh
author_facet Laura El-Katiri
Bassam Fattouh
author_sort Laura El-Katiri
collection DOAJ
description Energy subsidies are among the most pervasive and controversial fiscal policy tools used in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). In a region with few functioning social welfare systems, subsidised energy prices continue to form an important social safety net, albeit a highly costly and inefficient one. In the MENA region’s oil and gas producing countries, low energy prices have also historically formed an important element of an unwritten social contract, where governments have extracted their countries’ hydrocarbon riches in return for citizens’ participation in sharing resource rents. While it is clear that energy subsidy reform will not be the only variable at play, its potential socio-economic dividends are important factors for enabling some common regional objectives—sustainable fiscal policies, fiscal space to invest in key areas, and a more efficient and equitable distribution of scarce resources—to be achieved, helping to promote a more stable political status quo in the long term. If accommodated by effective mitigation measures, reforming energy subsidies in the MENA region’s middle-income economies could be a powerful tool for governments—addressing those very profound socio-economic grievances that have contributed to the outbreak of political protest and, in some cases, to an intensification of domestic infighting over political control. In this paper, we look at some of the MENA region’s potential avenues for reform. While the past has demonstrated the political difficulty of reforming energy prices, recent experience also shows that the reform of energy subsidies can be achieved, if accompanied by a set of enabling factors.
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spelling doaj-art-71c6be336e604e90a9d45183c9f6d65f2024-12-09T15:48:00ZengInstitut de Hautes Études Internationales et du DéveloppementRevue Internationale de Politique de Développement1663-93751663-93912017-02-01710.4000/poldev.2267A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North AfricaLaura El-KatiriBassam FattouhEnergy subsidies are among the most pervasive and controversial fiscal policy tools used in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). In a region with few functioning social welfare systems, subsidised energy prices continue to form an important social safety net, albeit a highly costly and inefficient one. In the MENA region’s oil and gas producing countries, low energy prices have also historically formed an important element of an unwritten social contract, where governments have extracted their countries’ hydrocarbon riches in return for citizens’ participation in sharing resource rents. While it is clear that energy subsidy reform will not be the only variable at play, its potential socio-economic dividends are important factors for enabling some common regional objectives—sustainable fiscal policies, fiscal space to invest in key areas, and a more efficient and equitable distribution of scarce resources—to be achieved, helping to promote a more stable political status quo in the long term. If accommodated by effective mitigation measures, reforming energy subsidies in the MENA region’s middle-income economies could be a powerful tool for governments—addressing those very profound socio-economic grievances that have contributed to the outbreak of political protest and, in some cases, to an intensification of domestic infighting over political control. In this paper, we look at some of the MENA region’s potential avenues for reform. While the past has demonstrated the political difficulty of reforming energy prices, recent experience also shows that the reform of energy subsidies can be achieved, if accompanied by a set of enabling factors.https://journals.openedition.org/poldev/2267
spellingShingle Laura El-Katiri
Bassam Fattouh
A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North Africa
Revue Internationale de Politique de Développement
title A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North Africa
title_full A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North Africa
title_fullStr A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North Africa
title_full_unstemmed A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North Africa
title_short A Brief Political Economy of Energy Subsidies in the Middle East and North Africa
title_sort brief political economy of energy subsidies in the middle east and north africa
url https://journals.openedition.org/poldev/2267
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