Abstract

All enterprises in the field of energy processing in China are state-owned enterprises (SOEs), and the government regulates the prices of their products. China's SOEs have multiple objectives, so the market is not mimic a simple oligopoly market. Energy processing sectors are the links between primary fossil energy and the economy. We apply a dynamic recursive computable general equilibrium model with multi-sectors and multi-households, named CEEEA/CGE model, to simulate and analyze the impact of primary fossil energy cost changes and what will happen if prices are regulated in these energy processing sectors. These results underscore the role of price regulation in energy processing sectors: the regulation seems to stabilize the economy. It will reduce the impact of rising and falling energy costs, whether the impact is good or bad. Other findings are: 1) “resource curse” is spotted when the primary energy cost is reduced dramatically. 2) CPI only increases by a little, even if the primary energy costs increase significantly. 3) The economic impact of the changes in fossil energy costs is asymmetric.

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