Taxes and Caps as Climate Policy Instruments with Domestic and Imported Fuels
This paper develops a global model of climate policy, focusing on the choice between tax and cap-and-trade solutions. The analysis assumes that the world can be split into two regions, with two fuels that both lead to carbon emissions. Region A con...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/01/11638138/taxes-caps-climate-policy-instruments-domestic-imported-fuels http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19949 |
Summary: | This paper develops a global model of
climate policy, focusing on the choice between tax and
cap-and-trade solutions. The analysis assumes that the world
can be split into two regions, with two fuels that both lead
to carbon emissions. Region A consumes all fuels, and is
responsible for defining and implementing climate policy.
Region B produces all of fuel 1 (oil), while fuel 2
(interpreted as coal, natural gas, or renewables) is both
produced and consumed in region A. The paper studies three
model variants. All involve full policy coordination in each
country block, but no coordination across blocks; and all
involve an optimal producer tax on fuel 1 by region B. In
model 1, region A sets two fuel consumption taxes, one for
each fuel. The optimal region A tax on fuel 1 then exceeds
the Pigou level as defined by the region; the tax set on
fuel 2 is Pigouvian. The presence of a second fuel in region
A reduces region B s optimal tax on fuel 1. In model 2,
region A sets a common carbon tax, which is lower (higher)
for fuel 1 (2) than in model 1. In model 3, region A sets a
carbon emissions cap. This enhances region B s strategic
position via the trade-off between fuels 1 and 2 in region
A, following from the cap. In realistic cases, this leaves
region A strategically weaker under a cap policy than under
a tax policy, more so the less carbon-intensive the local
fuel (2) is. In conclusion, a fuel-consuming and importing
region that determines a climate policy will typically
prefer to set a carbon tax, instead of setting a carbon
emissions cap. The main reason is that a tax is more
efficient than a cap at extracting rent from fuel (oil) exporters. |
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