Question
Why, according to the passage NOW is this the right time
to withdraw subsidy on fossil fuels? Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow based on it. Many things have gotten harder as the world settles into a protracted spell of low oil prices and sluggish growth - from avoiding deflation to creating jobs. One thing has gotten easier, as well as more urgent: eliminating fossil-fuel subsidies. Governments have long paid lip service to this idea. The G-20 has been promising to phase out fuel subsidies since 2009, but the measures remain widespread and resilient . Nations from the US to the UK to Russia continue to spend billions on tax breaks and other subsidies for the production of oil, gas and coal. Japan, South Korea and China support massive fossil-fuel projects outside their borders. For years, many countries -- including some of the world's biggest energy producers -- have also used subsidies to lower gasoline and diesel prices, supposedly to help the poor. The sums involved are huge. The International Energy Agency estimates that countries spent $493 billion on consumption subsidies for fossil fuels in 2014. The UK's Overseas Development Institute suggests G-20 countries alone devoted an additional $450 billion to producer supports that year. These ridiculous outlays would be economically wasteful even if they didn't also harm the environment. They fuel corruption, discourage efficient use of energy and promote needlessly capital-intensive industries. They sustain unviable fossil-fuel producers, hold back innovation, and encourage countries to build uneconomic pipelines and coal-fired power plants. Last and most important, if governments are to have any hope of meeting their ambitious climate targets, they need to stop paying people to use and produce fossil fuels. Right now, the conditions for doing that could hardly be better. While oil is cheap, governments can phase out demand-side subsidies without hurting consumers too much. And the possibility of slower growth in the longer term caused by demographic pressures and faltering innovation makes it all the more vital to use resources efficiently. Wasteful subsidies crowd out public spending on infrastructure and education that would help to put growth back on track. Protecting the poor will be important, but it needn't be difficult: Spending less on fuel subsidies would free revenues to be used for that purpose. Note, though, that fuel subsidies mainly benefit the rich and middle class. (In low- and middle-income countries, rich households use far more subsidized fuel than poor households.) Political resistance to reforming subsidies often arises more from the cost it would impose on the better-off than from the burden it would place on the poor.Solution
It is stated in the passage “While oil is cheap, governments can phase out demand-side subsidies without hurting consumers too much. And the possibility of slower growth in the longer term caused by demographic pressures and faltering innovation makes it all the more vital to use resources efficiently.” Point 1 is true according to the passage, but it has no connection with ‘NOW’ being the right time.
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Rational decision making is relies on _______
Which of the following would be a decision which is for repetitive or routine problems for which the responses have been already been decided?
Which of the following is not a feature of a strategic decision?
Which of the following is not a disadvantage of group decision making?
What is a common barrier to accurately identifying a problem?
Which bias in management involves the tendency to prioritize information that confirms pre-existing beliefs?
Which of the following best describes a decision tree?
Which of the following decisions cannot be delegated?
What is the purpose of evaluating the feasibility of possible solutions?