Optimal Carbon Offsets with Heterogeneous Regions
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Show full item recordAuthor/s:
Belfiori, Elisa
Macera, Manuel
Date:
2024-02-08Abstract
We study optimal climate policy in a global economy where regions differ in wealth
and vulnerability to climate change. Carbon emissions from production generate out-
put losses - a negative climate externality - and a technology to absorb and offset these
emissions is available to all regions. We investigate how inequality shapes the stance
of the global climate policy and the schedule of
net emissions
across regions: emissions
net of carbon offsets. We provide an aggregation result that shows that the model with
regional heterogeneity can be cast into a representative region world economy with a
different discount factor and damage function elasticity to net emissions. We use this
result to show that (i) Requiring all regions to contribute equally to carbon offsets ex-
acerbates inequality and, therefore, efficiency calls for a less aggressive climate policy
with more emissions and less carbon offsetting than in a representative agent world;
(ii) When carbon offsets are allowed to depend on wealth, a more aggressive climate
policy is optimal; (iii) Any global net emissions target prescribes positive net emis-
sions for poor regions and negative net emissions for wealthy ones, with the burden
on the rich increasing with inequality. These results highlight that carbon offsets play
a crucial role in designing global climate policy because they act as a redistribution
tool across unequal regions.