This paper looks at the pricing of petroleum products in Latin America and compares the policies adopted in countries with different endowments and with different traditions as to state involvement in the oil industry. I find that, in contrast to the OECD countries, product prices are used extensively as instruments of policy and that in general the more oil a country has the lower are its domestic prices. They also tend to be lower in the presence of state monopolies.
CEPAL (Comisión Económica para América Látina) (1970). Economic Bulletin, for lei tin America, XV (2), United Nations.
2.
CEPAL(Comisión Económica para América Látina) (1975). América Látina y los Problemas Actuales de la Energía, Fondo de Cultura Económica, Mexico.
3.
ChoucriN. (1986). “Domestic Energy Pricing: Trends and Implications for the Arab World.” The Journal of Energy and Development11(1).
4.
DesaiV., ed. (1987). Energy Policy Experience of A sian Countries, Asian Development Bank, Manila, Philippines.
5.
DunkerleyJ.HochI. (1986). “The Pricing of Transport Fuels.” Energy Policy (August).
6.
JuliusD. (1986). “Domestic Pricing of Petroleum Products: Efficiency and Equity Impacts in Developing Countries.” OPEC Review (Spring).
7.
KosmoM. (1987). Money to Burn? The HighCostof Energy Subsidies, World Resources Institute.
8.
MunasingheM. (1985). Energy Pricing and Demand Management. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
9.
PhilipG. (1982). Oil and Politics in Latin America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
10.
PittM. (1985). “Equity Externalities and Energy Subsidies: The Case of Kerosene in Indonesia.” Journal of Development Economics17.
11.
SiddayaoC., ed. (1985). Criteria for Energy Pricing Policy, Honolulu: Graham and Trotman, The East-West Center.
12.
SternerT. (1985a). Energy Use in Mexican Industry, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
13.
SternerT. (1985b). “The Politics of Energy in Latin America: A Study of the History of the Oil and Nuclear Industries.” Paper presented at the Latin American Conference in Gothenburg.
14.
SternerT. (1987). “Pricing of Oil-Products in the Third World,” in WoodD. ed., Papers and Proceedings of the Eighth Annual American Conference of the International Association of Energy Economists, Boston, Massachusetts.
15.
World Bank (1984). “Ecuador: An Agenda for Recovery and Sustained Growth.” Mimeo, Washington, D C.