Title: Carbon Taxes, Climate Change, and Sustainable Development
1Carbon Taxes, Climate Change, and Sustainable
Development
- Tariq Banuri
- Stockholm Environment Institute
- June 2008
2Economics of Climate Policy
- Pigovian (Economists choice) carbon tax
- Coasian (Kyoto option) property rights cap and
trade system - Keynesian, or the Investment option
- Relevant Factors
- Scale/ timing
- Policy credibility
- Development impact
3Other Instruments
- Institutional Development
- IRENA (AOSIS proposal 1997)
- Feed in Tariff approach
- Investment in Renewables
- Financing through other global taxes
- Tobin Tax (Epstein-Gelbspan proposal)
- Air travel tax
- Progressive global tax (Baer et al)
- Excess emissions penalty (Brazilian Proposal
for Kyoto)
4Pros and Cons of Cabon Tax
- Pro
- Internalization of externalities
- Revenue generation (but contrary to ecotaxation
conception) - Discouragement of rent seeking
- Con
- Uncertainty (how high a tax is needed?)
- Equity impact, Development impact
- Tinbergen critique (tools and goals)
- Dual pricing and institutions
5Impact of 100/tCO2 (367/tC)
6Implications for Development
- Balance of payments oil imports, impact of
global recession on exports - Fiscal Deficit Tariff revenue, subsidies to low
income households, recession and revenue, welfare
spending - Inflation Energy prices, exchange rate
depreciation, budget deficit - Growth Aggregate demand, shift of investment to
energy, welfare costs
7The Development Crises
- Traditional development and MDGs
- Solution conventional financial flows
- The impact of climate change
- Solution Financial and support for adaptation
- Impact of OECD climate policies (e.g., carbon
tax) - Solution Policy coherence in North
- Impact of own climate policies (especially
energy) - Solution New and additional resources for
mitigation and adaptation - The growth conundrum Has the age of growth come
to an end?
8Stern Stabilization Trajectories
9Emission Trajectories for 450 ppm
80 global reductions by 2050
Whats left for the South?
90 by 2050 in the North
What kind of climate regime can make this
possible?
10An Alternative Conception
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13Emissions and Income
Source World Bank (1998) Marland, et al. (1998).
14The Role of Energy
- Main difference between rich and poor countries
- Strongly correlated with HD indicators
- Developing countries need to expand electricity
and transport infrastructure three to four times
to reach basic needs goals - Expansion is constrained not by demand
(efficiency, population) but by supply
(investment capacity). - Over 75 emissions from the energy sector
- Projected developing country energy growth (3 to
5) means more emissions despite rising energy
efficiency.
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17Developing Country Energy Deficit
Energy Consumption per capita
Developing Countries
18Example Energy Market
- Electricity to low and middle income subsidized
(3-6 cents per kWh) also subsidy on natural gas - Low taxes on petroleum products, especially
diesel and kerosene, compensation for global
price increases - Incentives for alternative generation levelized
tariffs across time (20 years) and sources. - Levelized tariffs for distributors
- Significant suppressed demand (brown outs,
limited access) - Rising prices leading to resistance and inflation
19Options
- Carbon taxes and cap and trade can lead to higher
prices with cascading impacts, and will need
compensating policies - Cap and trade need investment in institutions to
benefit from market opportunities - Investment option public supported investment
program in renewables, subsidized as needed in
line with welfare implications, but will need
global financing