Forthcoming : Compensating against fuel price inflation: Price subsidies or transfers?

Article dans une revue: Compensating agents against substantial and sudden shocks requires both targeting tax policies and taking behavioral responses into account. Based on transaction-level data from France, this article exploits quasi-experimental variation provided by 2022 fuel price inflation and excise tax cuts. After disentangling anticipation from price effects, we estimate a price elasticity of fuel demand of -0.31, on average, which varies little with respect to income and location but substantially decreases with fuel spending, in absolute value. Using targeted transfers only achieves imperfect compensation, yet a budget-constrained policy-maker seeking to alleviate excessive losses relative to income prefers income-based transfers to price subsidies.

Auteur(s)

Odran Bonnet, Étienne Fize, Tristan Loisel, Lionel Wilner

Revue
  • Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Date de publication
  • 2024
Mots-clés
  • Commodity taxation
  • Excise fuel tax
  • Tax-and-transfer schemes
  • Elasticité du prix de l’essence
  • Anticipatory behavior
  • Transaction-level data
Version
  • 1