4.5 Article

Expenditure-Based Indicators of Energy Poverty-An Analysis of Income and Expenditure Elasticities

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14010008

Keywords

energy poverty; indicators; European Union; sensitivity analysis; household budget survey; micro data

Categories

Funding

  1. (EU Commission)

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This paper outlines the EU's proposal for monitoring energy poverty and defines indicators accordingly, while also conducting a sensitivity analysis to evaluate their responses to changes in income and energy expenditure. The study finds that the changes in indicators largely depend on the distribution of income and energy expenditure, reflecting certain limitations in their applicability.
Energy poverty is high up on national and European Union policy agendas. A number of possible indicators to measure the issue have been identified in the literature, but comparable data with European coverage is scarce. The EU Commission thus proposes four independent indicators on the EU Energy Poverty Observatory based on self-reported items from the pan-European surveys on income and living conditions (SILC) and household budgets (HBS). It is of increasing public interest to analyse social impacts of energy policies, and quantify energy poverty indicators also from modelling. This paper first shortly outlines how the expenditure-based indicators using HBS micro data may be directly linked to existing macroeconomic models through their defining variables (energy expenditure and income). As endogenous modelling based on micro data is difficult, the link may be country-specific elasticities. The main contribution of the paper is a systematic in-depth sensitivity analysis of the two indicators to changes in income and energy expenditure following varying patterns in the underlying distributions of the micro data. The results may be used by future soft links to models. The results display sometimes counterintuitive effects. We find that whether these indicators increase/decrease after a change of income or energy expenditure largely depends on the specific country-wise income and energy expenditure distribution between households on a micro-level. Due to their definition, the examined indicators are especially sensitive, when income changes alter the indicator threshold values, which in these cases are the median values in underlying distributions. We discuss these findings and relate them to several indicator shortcomings and potential remedies through changes in indicator definition.

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