How policymakers manage the energy transition will shape the economic futures of their countries. The choice of instruments, the sequencing of reforms and the pace of change will affect fiscal positions, inflation, trade balances, employment, peoples’ lives and economic growth for decades.
Done well, the transition can free up fiscal space, reduce import dependence and open new sources of economic growth and employment. The difference lies not in ambition but in fit: between the policies governments choose and the conditions that determine what they can actually deliver.
Yet in most national energy transition plans, this fit problem goes unexamined. The macroeconomic dimension of energy transition is largely missing from national plans. A review by ESCAP of nationally determined contributions found that while almost 90% of Asia-Pacific countries mention gross domestic product (GDP), only 12% refer to fiscal policy and none to monetary policy. The 2026 edition of the Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific examines this gap, assessing what it takes for countries to act credibly on the macroeconomic dimension of the transition.
One policy does not fit all
Across Asia and the Pacific, governments are reaching for the same toolkit: carbon pricing, green bonds, subsidy reform and industrial policy. These are legitimate instruments. But their effectiveness is contingent upon the foundations on which they operate. Carbon pricing requires systems to measure and verify emissions. Green bonds need financial markets deep enough to absorb them. Each works best when the underlying conditions are in place: Fiji’s 2017 sovereign green bond, backed by a credible framework, was oversubscribed by investors and financed clean water access for 42,000 people.
Knowing what your economy can actually do
Before sequencing the right policies, a government needs an honest read of its own economy. The Survey 2026 identifies four dimensions: fiscal space, financial market depth, institutional strength and technological capacity. A gap in any one can make an otherwise sound instrument unworkable.
The combination of constraints matters as much as any single one. Malaysia’s Green Investment Tax Allowance shows what becomes possible when institutional capacity is in place to design and administer a credible scheme. In the first half of 2023, it mobilized RM1.3 billion (US$280 million) in qualifying green technology projects, driving industrial retrofitting, reducing the economy’s long-term energy import bill and creating skilled jobs in energy efficiency and solar services.
Different starting points, different strategies
The Survey 2026 finds that across the region, economies cluster into broadly recognizable situations. In each, the right policy entry point is different, because the binding constraint is different. Three archetypes stand out.
First archetype: Where fiscal constraints are tight, the sequencing imperative is clear: free up revenue before deploying instruments that cost money. Indonesia’s subsidy reform provides an illustration. When oil prices declined in 2014, cutting fuel subsidies and redirecting the fiscal savings into infrastructure and social protection created the fiscal foundation for subsequent transition-related measures.
Second archetype: Where institutional and financial capacity is stronger, the constraint is different: how to fully translate the existing capacity into effective transition policy. Thailand, for example, has financial markets capable of supporting sovereign sustainability-linked bonds, active zero-emission vehicle targets, and ongoing work on emissions trading. For economies in this position, the challenge is less about basic feasibility than about how far available tools are used.
Third archetype: Where capacity across the board is more limited, the entry point should be fundamental. In economies like the Solomon Islands, the priority is not choosing between carbon pricing mechanisms. It is building energy access and grid reliability without which no productive activity can take place. Sophisticated market instruments can follow once the institutional foundations that make them enforceable are in place.
Feasibility is not destiny
Feasibility is not a fixed ceiling. Nepal expanded electricity access from 53% to 95% between 2010 and 2024, moving the national utility from chronic deficit to profitability and saving an estimated 6-7% of GDP annually in avoided losses.
Regional cooperation amplifies all three strategies: cross-border power trade, pooled financing platforms and shared green finance frameworks lower costs and expand the set of viable instruments for every economy.
Strategy before instruments
The energy transition will not be delivered by announcing the right policies. It will be delivered by sequencing the right policies in the right order for the right country context. The feasibility framework is not a call to lower our ambitions, but a blueprint for making ambition credible. To move from ambition to reality, governments should stop treating energy transition as an environmental auxiliary and start treating it as the core of socioeconomic progress.
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Note: This is the second in a two-part blog series on the macroeconomics of energy transition. Read the first blog here.
