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Who pays and who gains from fuel policies in Brazil?
Affiliation:1. Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics and Energy Biosciences Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA;2. Department of Economics, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE), Aguascalientes, Mexico;3. Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California, Berkeley, USA;1. Department of Agricultural Economics, Texas A&M University, 2124 TAMU, College Station, TX, USA 77843-2124;2. Symbios Energy Solutions, Inc., 2611 NW Upshur St., #203, Portland, OR, USA 97210
Abstract:Brazil has pursued a mix of policy interventions in the fuel sector to achieve multiple objectives of economic and social development, promoting biofuels and reducing dependence on oil. We develop an economic framework to provide insight on the fuel policy choices in Brazil and to analyze the trade-offs they have engendered in the fuel and sugar sectors. We also examine their distributional impacts on producers and consumers in the sugar, oil and biofuel sectors and on government revenues. Additionally, we undertake a normative analysis for the purpose of comparing the welfare and environmental impacts of existing policies with those justified by the goal of maximizing social welfare and addressing market failure. The ex-post analysis of the outcomes for different stakeholders in the fuel and sugar sectors provides insights on the likely political-economic factors guiding policy choices. We find that the status quo policies are likely to have been motivated by the objectives of increasing oil exports, raising government revenue and promoting rural development through the sugarcane sector and have had a significant adverse effect on fuel and sugar consumers, aggregate social welfare and greenhouse gas emissions in Brazil.
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