|
govt juggles prices, politics
as the government continues to pour billions every
year into its sweeping subsidy program, economists question whether
clutching onto notions of social and political stability is really
worth the economic price tag of not reforming the system.
in the governments 2002/03 budget, £e
6.7 billion nearly 5 percent of the entire £e 141.65
billion planned expenditure went towards funding direct subsidies
on basic commodities (bread, sugar, cooking oil), housing, transportation
and various exports. this figure excludes non-direct subsidies on
kerosene, natural gas, electricity, gasoline and water.
in a policy statement delivered to parliament on december
29, prime minister atef ebeid stressed that the governments
underwriting of commodities would continue, despite a rise in world
prices. abolition of this subsidy is unthinkable, ebeid
said.
but the cost of keeping prices low is enormous
and rising. subsidies on the popular baladi bread alone tally roughly
£e 2 billion a year.
hossam badrawi, a national democratic party (ndp)
parliament member, speaking at a roundtable discussion held by the
american chamber of commerce in egypt (which publishes business
monthly) on december 2, said the annual cost to keep the system
in working order had risen by £e 16 million.
in response, the opposition wafd partys parliamentary head
mounir abdel nour said the cost increase was an even steeper £e
24 million.
but the government continues to resist any reform
of the system. the remaining subsidies will remain untouched
for several years, a government economic official said. until
a better idea comes up.
according to some economists, better ideas are plain
to see.
the international monetary fund (imf)s representative
to egypt, nadeem ul haque, said blanket subsidies are no longer
recommended anywhere in the world. rather, subsidies should
focus on protecting only vulnerable groups. if you have a
properly targeted subsidy system, it will not be a huge fiscal burden,
ul haque said.
ahmed farouk ghoneim, an assistant professor at cairo
universitys faculty of economics and political science, agreed
that long-term, excessive subsidy policies were not sustainable,
and would reach a limit when budget deficits widen, and external
and internal debt balloons.
ghoneim said subsidies could be revamped by focusing
on easy to identify, poorer geographical districts. bread
in affluent areas like garden city or zamalek or maadi should not
be subsidized to the same extent as in a poor area like boulaq,
he said. but this is the case now in egypt.
subsidies in some areas, such as telecommunications,
have been gradually eliminated or greatly reduced. but subsidies
on commodities are especially politically sensitive. according to
ul haque, most developing countries use subsidies as an alternative
to the inflationary measure of raising the low wages of public sector
workers. this is undoubtedly true in egypt, where millions of government
employees make less than £e 200 per month.
despite overstaffing throughout the public sector,
the government remains committed to the status quo. there
are 5 million employees in the government, and they all want to
keep things as is, badrawi said.
but using subsidies as an anti-inflationary measure
is dangerous in the long term, ul haque continued. eventually,
they have to be financed, and if subsidies keep on increasing to
protect the rate of inflation, then financing will show through
monetary policy, which is [also] inflationary, he said.
ghoneim asserted that subsidies in egypt have
been bad for the economy, because they give wrong economic signals
and help in the misallocation of resources. instead, subsidies...
should be used to correct market failures and overcome the negative
impact of externalities.
this can be done, for instance, with state investment in projects
where the social return exceeds the economic return.
and as for feeding the masses, cash subsidies are
preferred over in-kind subsidies, ghoneim said, because they
give the consumer the right of choice, while in-kind subsidies create
distortions in production and consumption. subsidies for bread,
for instance, compel consumers to favor it over rice, which is a
good nutritional substitute.
for the medium term, ghoneim suggested that subsidies
should be financed from additional taxes on unnecessary goods,
like cigarettes. such taxes could have the positive effect of reducing
smoking and lessening health care costs. this creates an extra
burden on unnecessary goods, which are goods that are bads.
subsidies can then be reduced when there is an increase in real
wages, he said.
aside from staple foods, egypt subsidizes transportation,
water and fuel each of which entails its own problems when
it comes to reform.
public buses remain dirt cheap, and ticket prices for the metro
havent changed in years, but the lack of adequate financial
resources inevitably means the mass transportation system is mismanaged,
inefficient and unsafe, ghoneim said.
raising ticket prices, however, would be complicated,
as much of the low-income population relies on cheap transportation.
how you overcome this depends on your priorities, ghoneim
says. every country has always put social and political stability
among its major aims.
for ul haque, a productive work force demands a mass
transit system, but that is not to say that it should be heavily
subsidized.
similar debates surround water and fuel subsidies.
overhauling the system that provides low-cost utility water and
free agricultural water could spark social uproar, while increases
to fuel prices might lead to a ripple effect on the cost of commodities
and services.
its not just a third world problem. according
to josé-maría figueres, managing director of the world
economic forum and former president of costa rica, developed countries
also suffer from terrific, horrendously large subsidies,
particularly in agriculture. one half of the european unions
budget goes to agricultural subsidies. that cannot be, figueres
said. this is something where the north, the developed world,
has to walk the walk.
egypt, he added, faced stiff competition from highly
subsidized cotton growers in other countries. but even though subsidy
reductions could boost egypts cotton exports, egypts
miniscule lobbying influence in world trade prevents it from demanding
that its trading partners like the eu reduce subsidies.
moreover, warned ghoneim, a reduction of farm subsidies
in europe might lead to a rise in world food prices, which would,
in turn, be harmful to egypt in terms of its trade deficit and balance
of payments. lobbies in the west, he added, regularly resist any
reforms of protectionist policies in sensitive industries,
including agriculture, ready-made garments and steel.
according to figueres, the step-by-step reduction
or elimination of subsidies is the key to creating a level playing
field for global competition. in order to stimulate trade, investment,
job creation and entrepreneurship, governments should have a clear
national strategy that is implemented gradually, he said.
ul haque said any countrys transition from general
to targeted subsidies demands extensive preparations, including
technical analysis, studies of the political economy and culture,
and the compiling of accurate and comprehensive databases. it
cannot be done overnight. it takes a few years to make the transition,
he said.
abdalla f. hassan
submit
your comment
top
|