Document Type
Discussion Paper
Publication Date
12-5-2024
CFDP Number
2311R1
Journal of Economic Literature (JEL) Code(s)
F18, H23, Q54
Abstract
Climate policy by a coalition of countries can shift activities—extraction, production, and consumption—to regions outside the coalition. We build a stylized general-equilibrium model of trade and carbon externalities to derive a coalition’s optimal Pareto-improving policy in such an environment. It can be implemented through: (i) a tax on fossil-fuel extraction at a rate equal to the global marginal harm from carbon emissions, (ii) a tax on imports of energy and goods, and a rebate of the tax on exports of energy but not goods, all at a lower rate per unit of carbon than the extraction tax rate, and (iii) a goods-specific export subsidy. This combination of taxes and subsidies exploits international trade to expand the policy’s reach. It promotes energy efficient production and eliminates leakage by taxing the carbon content of goods imports and by encouraging goods exports. It controls the energy price in the non-taxing region by balancing supply-side and demand-side taxes. We use a quantitative version of the model to illustrate the gains achieved by the optimal policy and simpler variants of it. Combining supply-side and demand-side taxes generates first-order welfare improvements over current and proposed climate policies.
Recommended Citation
Kortum, Samuel and Weisbach, David A., "Optimal Unilateral Carbon Policy" (2024). Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers. 2823.
https://elischolar.library.yale.edu/cowles-discussion-paper-series/2823