A drone view of the Marshalls Energy Company's main power plant in Majuro. The company has just raised its rates by over 20 percent due to high fuel costs. Photo: Marshall Islands Journal
One of the biggest electricity increases in the history of the Marshalls Energy Company was implemented last week - the first of a two-step tariff increase.
Power charges rose by six cents per kilowatt hour (kWh) across the board for government, business and residential.
On 18 May, the price will rise another five cents per kWh, to put in place an 11-cent increase this month, according to a "tariff rate adjustment" announcement posted by the government utility company to its website earlier in the week.
The power rate increases are expected to result in local businesses passing on the costs of the 21 percent electricity rate hike to consumers.
This is the latest economic shock, following skyrocketing gas and diesel prices that have seen gas prices at the pump soar to US$8.40 per gallon, and diesel hit the US$10.35 mark. These led the local taxi industry to implement a 50 percent hike in taxi fares.
While these fuel shocks continue to cascade in this small island nation, the government has responded in an unprecedented way, with more initiatives that put money into the hands of Marshallese citizens.
The Marshall Islands government delayed the power company's need to raise rates by providing a US$4 million subsidy for its power plant fuel purchase in early April.
The aim, said Finance Minister David Paul, was to postpone the power company's tariff increase to allow time for a new tax break to take effect, putting additional money into the every-two-week paychecks of local workers.
In late April, a few days before the power rates increased, the government's unprecedented tax cut went into force, giving all workers paid on a biweekly basis US$25.60 more net income per paycheck.
This plan was initiated over a year ago as part of a major revamp of the tax system and was supposed to go into effect next year.
But when the US and Israel attacked Iran at the end of February, the measure that exempts the first US$8320 from eight percent income tax was fast-tracked to go into effect at the end of April.
Finance Minister David Paul said in an interview this week that workers in Marshall Islands will take home an additional US$665.60 on an annual basis from this initiative. It is the latest demonstration of President Hilda Heine's government putting money into the hands of individual citizens.
During her first term in office, from 2016-2020, Heine negotiated with the World Bank to support an Early Childhood Development programmes to focus on cash transfers to mothers of children from birth to five years of age to counteract severe malnutrition in this age group.
Since its inception in 2019, the World Bank-funded program is now in its second phase and has injected US$40m into the project.
Mothers receive debit cards associated with their bank accounts at Bank of Marshall Islands and the programme provides regular conditional cash transfers to the mothers to help with needs of their young children.
As a result of a proposal pushed by Paul when he was an opposition member of parliament in the 2022-23 period, USs and Marshall Islands negotiators included an "Individual Support Distribution" provision in the Compact of Free Association treaty between the two countries.
This set the stage for the Marshall Islands to become the first nation ever to provide universal basic income quarterly payments to every citizen when the program started last November with a payment of $203 to 33,000 citizens.
Since then, an additional 7000 signed up so the universal basic income program is paying 40,000 people per quarter at a rate of about $160.
Marshall Islanders lined up at the national gymnasium in Majuro to collect their quarterly universal basic income payment Photo: Giff Johnson
