Faculty Working Papers

Bolivia’s Economic Pivot: Reviving the Energy Sector

Overview

Bolivia’s energy system is in structural decline. Natural gas production has fallen 54% since its 2014 peak, collapsing export volumes and turning hydrocarbons from a fiscal engine into a net drain on reserves. The cause is institutional, not geological: the 2005–2009 nationalization cycle increased state revenue capture during the commodity boom but weakened the incentives for long-term exploration. Fuel and domestic gas subsidies compounded the problem, distorting price signals and crowding out renewable investment. The current administration’s January 2026 fuel reform raised diesel prices by 163% and gasoline by 86%, but the heightened global oil prices have displayed the remaining structural weakness and domestic gas subsidy remains untouched, costing Bolivia over $900 million in forgone export earnings in 2025 alone. The reform agenda requires three priority actions: embedding fuel prices in a rules-based formula; restructuring hydrocarbons contracts to restore exploration incentives; and accelerating renewable energy deployment to free up natural gas for export.

Growth Lab Working Paper Series
No. 263

Authors

Lamby, L., Venturi, L., Hernández, J. & Hausmann, R.

Citation

Lamby, L., et al., 2026. Bolivia’s Economic Pivot: Reviving the Energy Sector. Growth Lab Working Paper, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.