The unequal economic consequences of carbon pricing

Category: Quantitative Economic Policy Seminar
When: 26 Januar 2023
, 14:00
 - 15:15
Where: Zoom

Abstract: This paper studies how carbon pricing affects emissions, economic aggregates and inequality. Exploiting institutional features of the European carbon market and high-frequency data, I identify a carbon policy shock. I find that a tighter carbon pricing regime leads to a significant increase in energy prices, a persistent fall in emissions and an uptick in green innovation. This comes at the cost of a temporary fall in economic activity, which is not borne equally across society: poorer households lower their consumption significantly while richer households are less affected. Not only are the poor more exposed because of their higher energy share, they also experience a larger fall in their income. These indirect, general-equilibrium effects turn out to be quantitatively more important than the direct price effects. A climate-economy model with heterogeneity in households' energy shares, income incidence and marginal propensities to consume is able to account for these facts.

The paper can be found here: https://dkaenzig.github.io/diegokaenzig.com/Papers/kaenzig_jmp_unequal_consequences_carbon_pricing.pdf

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