Implicit carbon prices: Making do with the taxes we have
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Show full item recordAuthor/s:
Belfiori, Elisa
Rezai, Armon
Date:
2024Abstract
Climate and fiscal policy interact closely. The former imposes explicit prices for carbon
emissions, while the latter affects emissions implicitly. We study the correspondence between
explicit and implicit carbon pricing of a Ramsey-optimal fiscal policy in a neoclassical growth
model of climate change. Our central result is that any arbitrary sequence of explicit carbon
prices can be achieved implicitly through a blend of conventional taxes (e.g., consumption,
energy, and income taxes), when lump-sum transfers are available. In a Ramsey setting, policy
balances these taxes’ traditional revenue-raising role with the Pigouvian role of fixing the
climate externality. We characterize the Ramsey and Pigouvian components of optimal tax rates.
We show that explicit carbon pricing is implicitly implementable through a mix of conventional
taxes also in this framework. We extend these findings to scenarios compatible with net-zero
emissions, adding carbon capture technologies and a cap on cumulative emissions
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Volume 125, May 2024, 102950 (Online ISSN: 1096-0449)