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来源类型Working Papers
规范类型论文
Analysis of the Hydrocarbon Sector in Bolivia: How are the Gas and Oil Revenues Distributed?
Christian Velasquez-Donaldson
发表日期2007
出版年2007
语种英语 ; Spanish
摘要

by: Christian Velasquez-Donaldson

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

This report analyzes the importance of the hydrocarbon sector in Bolivia. The oil and gas
sector currently represents a vital component of the Bolivian economy, accounting for 7
percent of the GDP in term of production and more than 30 percent of total government
income. In addition, the hydrocarbon sector not only represents an important economic sector
but also a political and social instrument for negotiations, mobilization and social
participation. The hydrocarbon sector in Bolivia also plays a strategic geopolitical role in
South America as it has the second largest reserves of natural gas in the region after
Venezuela. However, the current Bolivian nationalization process has placed this privileged
position of the country into question as Bolivia is trying to undo twenty years of neo-liberal
policies with the adoption of more nationalistic policies, assuming the control of the sector
and challenging the international community and the private sector to benefit its population.
The report also exposes that the important hydrocarbon revenues are not evenly distributed
across the country’s regions. The most important instruments of taxation, royalties and the
IDH, are creating a disequilibrium implying that regions with large populations get
considerably fewer resources than less populated regions. In addition, the current distribution
system, which is based on political criteria with some regional notion of fairness, is
discriminatory in the allocation of resources with out taking into account poverty criteria. In a
poor country like Bolivia with a strong political framework on poverty alleviation, the lack of
poverty criteria in the distribution system of such significant resources makes 1.5 million poor
people from La Paz get fewer resources than 300 thousand poor people from Pando in terms
of per capita distribution ($16 dollars per capita in La Paz vs. $600 dollars per capita in
Pando).
The report has found that the distribution system of the hydrocarbon revenues needs serious
changes to be more efficient and accomplish the goal of poverty reduction. The current
system of revenue allocation creates significant per capita inequalities between regions and
exacerbates the regional dependency on central transfers that depends on exhaustible and
unstable hydrocarbon production (92 percent of the prefecturas’ revenues and 66 percent of
the municipalities’ revenues come from government transfers). In addition, the
decentralization process of the country has several weaknesses. It does not allow local
governments to create their own tributary policies and generate their own resources, with
exception of municipalities that to some extent can administrate and collect two regional taxes
defined by the central government.
This disequilibrium has the potential to seriously threaten the unity of the country as a nation.
This situation will encourage producing regions to push for a large degree of decentralization
in order to take advantage of the enormous inflows of resources that the sector is generating.
In addition, non-producing regions will push for a significant share of those large resources
given the severe degree of poverty in the country. This leads to two important questions to
ask; first, who owns the natural resources, producing regions or the central government, and
second, how those revenues should be distributed?

In general, those questions are hard to answer and in most cases the answers have significant
political notions. In this aspect, the report presents results of a hypothetical calculation in
which we combine to some extent the notion that producing regions have the right to a share
of the revenues as does the central government. Because producing regions have solid
arguments to claim ownership, like natural heritage and social cost reimbursement, we found
undesirable and unviable the idea of completely draining those resources from
them. Nonetheless, the central government also has significant arguments to have a share of
those revenues, like income stability, fiscal equilibrium and macroeconomic
considerations. Therefore, we found it important that the central government should benefit
from a share of the natural wealth. However, the results of the hypothetical exercise
presented in this report have the objective of opening the debate and dialogue for needed
changes in the Bolivian hydrocarbon distribution system rather than suggesting a definitive
answer for a distribution system in Bolivia.

Keywords: Hydrocarbons, Tributary System, Resources Allocation, Transfer System
JEL classification: E62, D63, Q34, Q38

Working Paper 06/2007

446 KB
主题Macroeconomía
关键词: Hydrocarbons Tributary System Resources Allocation Transfer SystemJEL classification: E62 D63 Q34 Q38
URLhttps://www.inesad.edu.bo/analysis-of-the-hydrocarbon-sector-in-bolivia-how-are-the-gas-and-oil-revenues-distributed/
来源智库Instituto de Estudios Avanzados en Desarrollo (Bolivia)
资源类型智库出版物
条目标识符http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/143680
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Christian Velasquez-Donaldson. Analysis of the Hydrocarbon Sector in Bolivia: How are the Gas and Oil Revenues Distributed?. 2007.
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