A public finance perspective on climate policy: six interactions that may enhance welfare

"Climate change economics mostly neglects sizeable interactions of carbon pricing with other fiscal policy instruments. Conversely, public finance typically overlooks the effects of future decarbonization efforts when devising instruments for the major goals of fiscal policy. We argue that such...

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Main Authors: Siegmeier, Jan, Mattauch, Linus, Franks, Max, Klenert, David, Schultes, Anselm, Edenhofer, Ottmar
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Milan 2015
FEEM
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19112729124919309019-a-public-finance-perspective-o.htm
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author Siegmeier, Jan
Mattauch, Linus
Franks, Max
Klenert, David
Schultes, Anselm
Edenhofer, Ottmar
author_facet Siegmeier, Jan
Mattauch, Linus
Franks, Max
Klenert, David
Schultes, Anselm
Edenhofer, Ottmar
collection Library items
description "Climate change economics mostly neglects sizeable interactions of carbon pricing with other fiscal policy instruments. Conversely, public finance typically overlooks the effects of future decarbonization efforts when devising instruments for the major goals of fiscal policy. We argue that such a compartmentalisation is undesirable: policy design taking into account such interdependencies may enhance welfare and change the distribution of mitigation costs within and across generations. This claim is substantiated by analyzing six interactions between climate policy and public finance that are insufficiently explored in current research: (i) reduced tax competition in an open economy, (ii) portfolio effects induced through climate policy, (iii) restructuring public spending, (iv) revenue recycling for productive public investment, (v) greater intragenerational equity through appropriate revenue recycling and (vi) intergenerational Pareto-improvements through intertemporal transfers. We thereby structure the hitherto identified interactions between climate change mitigation and public finance and show that jointly considering carbon pricing and fiscal policy is legitimate and mandatory for sound policy appraisal."
format TEXT
id 19112729124919309019_3568f4c07c204077a6c49da79ca15b9b
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19112729124919309019_3568f4c07c204077a6c49da79ca15b9b
is_hierarchy_title A public finance perspective on climate policy: six interactions that may enhance welfare
language English
physical 41 p.
Digital
publishDate 2015
publisher Milan
FEEM
spellingShingle Siegmeier, Jan
Mattauch, Linus
Franks, Max
Klenert, David
Schultes, Anselm
Edenhofer, Ottmar
climate change
gas emission
public expenditure
sustainable development
taxation
decarbonization
A public finance perspective on climate policy: six interactions that may enhance welfare
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=108093592627
title A public finance perspective on climate policy: six interactions that may enhance welfare
topic climate change
gas emission
public expenditure
sustainable development
taxation
decarbonization
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19112729124919309019-a-public-finance-perspective-o.htm