Author
Listed:
- Alvin Holliman
- Kimberly Collins
Abstract
Purpose - Companies affected by California’s cap-and-trade legislation are allotted certain credits for production that can be used or sold and can purchase additional credits from the state, which become a revenue source to be used for activities that reduce carbon emissions. The purpose of this paper is to investigate who ultimately pays for this program, its effectiveness in reducing carbon emissions in accordance with established goals, and the related effectiveness to advance social, economic, and environmental equity. Design/methodology/approach - The methodology used for this research is secondary data analysis, triangulating three sources: California’s Climate Change Investment Reports, 2019-2021; repositories maintained by the California High-Speed Rail Authority and the California Air Resources Board; and a review of the literature and websites from other professional sources which addressed, directly and indirectly, the topics and questions explored in the study. Findings - Key findings include evidence of enhancing social and environmental equity but ineffectiveness in reducing carbon emissions in accordance with state goals. Furthermore, the program displays evidence of economic inequity as it demonstrates characteristics of regressive taxation and an inability of low-income persons to acquire electric vehicles due to high costs. Originality/value - The research effort is unique in that no other academic efforts were located which attempt to examine the cap-and-trade program’s effectiveness in attaining its goals.
Suggested Citation
Alvin Holliman & Kimberly Collins, 2023.
"California’s cap-and-trade program: is it effective in advancing social, economic, and environmental equity?,"
Public Administration and Policy: An Asia-Pacific Journal, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 26(2), pages 128-141, June.
Handle:
RePEc:eme:pappps:pap-06-2022-0069
DOI: 10.1108/PAP-06-2022-0069
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