Difference between revisions of "Fuel Prices Bolivia"
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{{Fuel Price Factsheet | {{Fuel Price Factsheet | ||
|Fuel Price Country=Bolivia | |Fuel Price Country=Bolivia | ||
+ | |Fuel Pricing Policies=*Bolivia is net-importer of fossil fuels from Venezuela and Argentina | ||
+ | *Fuels are sold subsidized | ||
+ | *Prices are heavily regulated | ||
+ | *Price gaps to neighbouring countries enforces smuggling | ||
+ | *Low revenue for oil producers (27 USD per barrel) leads to underinvestment | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Agencies:''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | Ministry of Energy and Mines (MEM) and the Ministry of Finance: Publishes on its web site the variations in average prices to the public of oil products. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Source and further information: http://uneprisoe.org/Pricing/FuelPricingPolicies.pdf | ||
+ | |||
+ | Fuel prices are uniform, controlled by government, and frozen for years at a time. Since Jan 2009, vehicles with foreign licence plates have been charged international prices, set every quarter. On the domestic market, the price of oil is US$27/bbl; concerned about declining oil production, government issued Supreme Decree 1202 in Mar 2012, providing a tax credit of US$30/bbl to foreign companies in addition to US$10 in cash they were receiving. As late as Dec 24, 2010, government was reportedly denying any intention to reform subsidies. However, just two days later, government as part of a broader subsidy reform increased diesel price by 83% and gasoline by 73%, the largest since 1991 when prices went up 35%. The increases were completely reversed 5 days later due to widespread protests, as was food subsidy reduction. In Feb 2011, government created a new ministry of communications, 8 years after such a ministry had been abolished. Fuel subsidies have amounted to about 3% of GDP in recent years. | ||
+ | Year 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 | ||
+ | US$ billion 108 140 288 487 462 666 706 | ||
+ | % of GDP 1.1 1.2 2.2 2.9 2.7 3.4 2.9 | ||
+ | |||
+ | (Source: Kojima, Masami. (2013, forthcoming). “Petroleum product pricing and complementary policies:Experience of 65 developing countries since 2009.” Washington DC: World Bank.) | ||
|Fuel Currency=BOB | |Fuel Currency=BOB | ||
|Fuel Price Exchange Rate=6.88 | |Fuel Price Exchange Rate=6.88 | ||
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http://www.tmf-vat.com/international-vat-rates-2010/94-bolivia-vat-rate.html | http://www.tmf-vat.com/international-vat-rates-2010/94-bolivia-vat-rate.html | ||
|Fuel Price Composition 2=GIZ_IFP2012_Bolivia2.png | |Fuel Price Composition 2=GIZ_IFP2012_Bolivia2.png | ||
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|Fuel Matrix Pricing Mechanism=1 | |Fuel Matrix Pricing Mechanism=1 | ||
|Fuel Matrix Price Level=1 | |Fuel Matrix Price Level=1 |
Revision as of 10:36, 14 February 2013
Part of: GIZ International Fuel Price database
Fuel Pricing Policies
Local Currency: | BOB |
Exchange Rate: | 6.88
|
Last Update: |
- Bolivia is net-importer of fossil fuels from Venezuela and Argentina
- Fuels are sold subsidized
- Prices are heavily regulated
- Price gaps to neighbouring countries enforces smuggling
- Low revenue for oil producers (27 USD per barrel) leads to underinvestment
Agencies:
Ministry of Energy and Mines (MEM) and the Ministry of Finance: Publishes on its web site the variations in average prices to the public of oil products.
Source and further information: http://uneprisoe.org/Pricing/FuelPricingPolicies.pdf
Fuel prices are uniform, controlled by government, and frozen for years at a time. Since Jan 2009, vehicles with foreign licence plates have been charged international prices, set every quarter. On the domestic market, the price of oil is US$27/bbl; concerned about declining oil production, government issued Supreme Decree 1202 in Mar 2012, providing a tax credit of US$30/bbl to foreign companies in addition to US$10 in cash they were receiving. As late as Dec 24, 2010, government was reportedly denying any intention to reform subsidies. However, just two days later, government as part of a broader subsidy reform increased diesel price by 83% and gasoline by 73%, the largest since 1991 when prices went up 35%. The increases were completely reversed 5 days later due to widespread protests, as was food subsidy reduction. In Feb 2011, government created a new ministry of communications, 8 years after such a ministry had been abolished. Fuel subsidies have amounted to about 3% of GDP in recent years. Year 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 US$ billion 108 140 288 487 462 666 706 % of GDP 1.1 1.2 2.2 2.9 2.7 3.4 2.9
(Source: Kojima, Masami. (2013, forthcoming). “Petroleum product pricing and complementary policies:Experience of 65 developing countries since 2009.” Washington DC: World Bank.)
Fuel Prices and Trends
Gasoline 95 Octane | Diesel | |
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in USD* |
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in Local Currency |
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* benchmark lines: green=US price; grey=price in Spain; red=price of Crude Oil
Fuel Price Composition
Price composition as of 2002/12/01.
Source: example to estimate %-values for each component
http://uneprisoe.org/Pricing/FuelPricingPolicies.pdf pages 15-18
http://www.tmf-vat.com/international-vat-rates-2010/94-bolivia-vat-rate.html
At a Glance
Regulation-Price-Matrix |
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Sources to the Public
Type of Information | Web-Link / Source |
---|---|
Other Information | http://www.bcb.gov.bo/ (Central Bank of Bolivia) |
Other Information | http://www.cbli.org.bo (Bolivian Chamber of Hydrocarbons) |
Other Information | http://www.bolivia-industry.com (National Chamber of Industry) |
Pump prices and margins | http://www.hidrocarburos.gob.bo/MHE2012/ |
Contact
Please find more information on GIZ International Fuel Price Database and http://www.giz.de/fuelprices