Energy Taxes and Oil Price Shocks.

Authors
Publication date
2015
Publication type
Journal Article
Summary This paper examines if an energy price shock should be compensated by a reduction in energy taxes to mitigate its impact on consumer prices. It shows that the consumer price should not increase by as much as the producer price, implying a small reduction in the energy tax in dollars. The energy tax rate, on the other hand, decreases sharply. This decline is primarily due to an adjustment in the Pigouvian component: A constant marginal social damage being divided by a higher producer price. The redistributive component of the tax remains at about 10% of the social cost of energy.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Topics of the publication
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