Protecting people
Poorer families typically spend two or three times as much of their income on energy and food compared with wealthier households, while they don’t have as much in savings. Protecting them is important to preserving social cohesion and avoiding a surge in poverty.
Targeted cash transfers, ideally delivered through existing social assistance systems, are generally the best way to do so because they preserve price signals and limit fiscal costs. If coverage is insufficient, governments can temporarily top up payments or widen eligibility, including to lower‑ and middle‑income households that are at risk of falling into poverty.
For very large but temporary shocks, additional measures may include one‑time rebates or spreading price increases over time, helping households cope without freezing prices outright. As a last resort, if food security is at risk and safety nets aren’t sufficient, temporary reductions in taxes or subsidies for stable foods may be appropriate if accompanied by a clear and credible timeline for ending them.
Supporting businesses
For firms, support serves a different aim: keeping viable enterprises operating and avoiding unnecessary bankruptcies. It should address short‑term cash‑flow problems, not deeper viability issues, and be focused on otherwise sound or strategically important businesses, especially in industries where higher costs quickly raise consumer prices.
Temporary liquidity support—such as government‑guaranteed loans, credit lines, or short‑term tax and social security deferrals—should be the first line of response. That’s because these tools are fiscally less costly and easier to undo. Direct grants or equity injections are best avoided, given their high fiscal cost and political difficulty to reverse.
Exceptional use
Some policy tools are broader and more distortionary. Energy-tax cuts, price caps, or general subsidies mute the important signals from prices, usually benefit higher‑income households more, and are hard to phase out. They can also quickly escalate government budget costs and raise the risk of shortages, especially if suppliers are not adequately compensated.
Broad measures to address rising prices may be justified if a group of specific conditions hold simultaneously:
- The price shock is clearly temporary.
- Higher energy prices are quickly feeding into broader inflation.
- Inflation expectations are at risk of becoming uncontrolled.
- Economic overheating is limited.
- Public finances have room to absorb the cost.
These conditions are hard to gauge in real time and, in any case, broad price controls have major spillovers. That’s why use of broad price tools should ideally be avoided, and if used, should be exceptional, temporary, transparent, and tightly circumscribed. Governments must weigh trade‑offs carefully. For example, price caps are easier to phase out but can drive shortages. Tax cuts pose fewer supply risks but are harder to stop and may cause persistent revenue losses. As a rule, full price freezes should be avoided.
Fiscal constraints
Fiscal space varies widely across countries and is now generally tighter than in past crises because of higher debt and borrowing costs. This strengthens the case for incremental and carefully calibrated responses. In countries where fiscal space is available, governments may have some scope to smooth severe but temporary price increases with targeted, transparent, and temporary measures.
Countries with limited fiscal space and weak social safety nets are more constrained. Extreme situations in which price increases threaten food or energy access may warrant rationing to manage demand, but this has very high economic costs. This underscores why it’s important to avoid generalized subsidies that quickly exhaust scarce fiscal resources.
Sharper tradeoffs
Even with improved policy frameworks, policy trade‑offs are often sharper in emerging market and developing economies. Compared with advanced economies, they typically have weaker social safety nets, larger shares of consumer spending on food and energy, tighter liquidity constraints, more fragile inflation expectations, and narrower fiscal space amid higher borrowing costs. Political pressure can also spur governments to act quickly when facing extraordinary shocks.
By contrast, advanced economies are less constrained. As a result, they should mainly use existing targeted transfers and automatic stabilizers, resorting to discretionary and price‑based measures only in exceptional cases.
This asymmetry matters globally. When larger or richer countries suppress domestic price signals, global demand rises, international prices increase, and shortages worsen—hurting poorer importing countries the most.
Policy sequence
The key question is not whether to act, but how to act effectively: assessing shock persistence, matching tools and objectives, distinguishing household and firm support, and tailoring responses to circumstances.
A disciplined, well‑sequenced approach—starting with targeted, temporary measures and escalating if needed—can help economies adjust to energy and food price shocks without costly policy mistakes, domestically and globally.
—For more details on the policy toolkit, see the expanded annex: Mitigating the Impact of High Energy and Food Prices.