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Direct and Indirect Impact of Fossil Fuel Price Changes on Cost of Farming in India. Mukesh Anand , NIPFP mukesh_anand@hotmail.com December 11, 2013. Presentation Plan. Motivation under-recovery (subsidy?) – large source of government revenue
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Direct and Indirect Impact of Fossil Fuel Price Changes on Cost of Farming in India MukeshAnand, NIPFP mukesh_anand@hotmail.com December 11, 2013
Presentation Plan • Motivation • under-recovery (subsidy?) – large source of government revenue • Report on Diesel http://www.nipfp.org.in/newweb/sites/default/files/Diesel%20Price%20Reform.pdf • Working Paper version at http://www.nipfp.org.in/newweb/sites/default/files/WP_2012_108.pdf • Economic and political issue – right prices, growth, inflation, equity • Fossil fuel use - in economy, in agriculture • Direct purchase for farms • Indirect purchase • I – O Analysis
Under-recovery of Oil Companies and Fiscal Subsidy on Sale of Sensitive Petroleum Products (billion INR)
Federal and Provincial Revenue from Taxation and Quasi-Taxation of Petroleum Products (billion INR)
Impact of Change in Fossil Fuel Prices • RBI, 2011 reports “…. every 10 per cent increase in global crude prices, ….., could have a direct impact of 1 percentage point increase in overall WPI inflation and the total impact could be about 2 percentage points over time……..” • Other studies {Bhattacharya and Kar (2005), Bhattacharya and Batra (2009), Kumar (2005)}: • economic growth rate may decline by between one to three per cent and • inflation may increase to between 6.5 and 18 per cent on account of rise in oil prices • Bhanumurthy et al (2012): 10 per cent increase in oil price would reduce growth rate by 0.9 per cent
Fossil Fuel Use in Indian Agriculture • Direct • Diesel to run pump sets, tractors, harvesters, threshers, combines • Kerosene, natural gas • Indirect • Natural Gas, Naphtha, Furnace Oil: Feedstock for Fertilisers • Coal, Diesel, Natural Gas: Energy / grid-power used on farms
Commodity * Commodity I-O Transactions Output Relation: x = Ax + f; x = [I – A]-1f Input or Price Relation: p' = p'A + ν'; p' = ν'[I – A]-1 Where, small case letters denote a vector, upper case letters denote a matrix, and ' denotes a row vector;
Interpretation • The matrix [I – A]-1 is the Leontief inverse matrix. • Elements of the Leontief inverse matrix capture both the direct and indirect effects of any change in the exogenous vectors (fand ν). • Let [I – A]-1 = R = {rij}, where rij is the i, jth element of the Leontief inverse. • Because of strict linearity in price equations, rij = δpj / δνi, that is the i, jth element of the Leontief inverse is the partial derivative of pj with respect to νi.
p' = ν'[I – A]-1 ν1 ν2 ν3 p1 p2 p3 = r11 r12 r13 r21 r22 r23 r31 r32 r33 That is, p1 p2 p3 = ν1 r11 + ν2 r21 + ν3r31 ν1r12 + ν2 r22+ ν3r32 ν1r13 + ν2 r23+ ν3r33 δpj / δνi, the partial derivative of pj with respect to νi, then is the i, jth element of the Leontief inverse matrix. For example, δp1/ δν2 = r21
Analysis of Coefficients of I – O Matrix and Leontief Inverse Matrix
Co-efficients for Direct and Total Effects of Fossil Fuels, 2007-8
Summary • Petroleum products are a major source of government tax revenue both at federal (15 per cent) and provincial (20 per cent) levels. • Under-recovery (November 16, ‘11: INR 10.17; May 16 ‘12: INR 13.64; July 1: INR 9.13; Sept 1: INR 17.05) on diesel is higher than tax realised from it. Situation reverses in Jan 18 ‘13: INR 9.16 under-recovery and tax INR 10.23; and as on December 01 ‘13: INR 9.99 under-recovery and tax INR 11.05 • Sale of diesel accounted for almost 57 per cent of total under-recovery in 2012-3. • Under-recovery on diesel (as on Dec. 01, 2013) was about 18.6 per cent of RSP in Delhi.
Summary • Indirect tax yield (federal plus provincial, December 2013) per litre of diesel (INR 11.05) is about 50 per cent from that on petrol (INR 21.32) • Wide divergence in total price between different (but jointly produced) petroleum products is undesirable. • Given the extant weight of diesel (mineral oils) in WPI, a 10 per cent increase in its RSP would cause price level to rise by 0.47 (0.94) per cent. • At the aggregate economy level fossil fuel intensity is declining – but, it is rising in farming sector. • Intensity of direct use of fossil fuels in farming has changed slowly from 0.005173 to 0.009826, between 1998-9 and 2007-8. • Further, including indirect use, fossil fuel intensity in farming has grown more than thrice over the same period (Inverse Demand) (from 0.020639 to 0.065810).
Summary • Fossil fuels constitute a relatively small fraction of farming costs (as compared to remainder of the economy). • A 10 per cent increase in price of fuel (diesel), could raise average cost of cultivation / production on farms by 0.56 per cent. • But, if price of all fossil fuels is similarly raised, and in turn these are reflected in the cost of inputs in agriculture, like power and fertiliser, then cost of cultivation / production on farms could be far higher. • Irrigation (perhaps even fertilisers and pesticides) use concentrated on relatively larger land holdings, perhaps owned by relatively richer farmers • Dominant rhetoric: that subsidy in input use (diesel, irrigation, power, fertilisers, and pesticides) disproportionately appropriated by larger and richer farmers. • But, subsidy policy on input-use subservient to the objective of food sufficiency - In turn, intended to raise productivity and output of farming.