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The Incidence of CO2 Emissions Pricing Under Alternative International Market Responses A Computable General Equilibrium Analysis for Germany

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  • Christoph Boehringer

    (University of Oldenburg, Department of Economics)

  • Thomas Rutherford

    (University of Wisconsin)

  • Jan Schneider

    (University of Oldenburg, Department of Economics)

Abstract

We investigate the economic impacts of CO2 emissions pricing for Germany in the context of the Paris Agreement where we highlight the role of international market responses for the incidence across heterogeneous households. We consider three settings for international spillover eects: (i) a small-open-economy framework where international commodity prices remain constant, (ii) a multi-region-trade framework with endogenous terms of trade where only Germany undertakes emission pricing, and (iii) a multi-region-trade framework where all other regions also price CO2 emissions. In all three settings Germany complies to a given domestic CO2 emissions reduction target through economy-wide uniform CO2 emissions pricing. CO2 revenues are recycled lump-sum to households on an equal-per-household basis. We nd that the small-openeconomy setting in the case of Germany not only overstates overall economic adjustment costs to CO2 emissions pricing, but also understates the degree of progressiveness of CO2 revenue recycling. The reason is that in the multi-region-trade frameworks Germany is able to pass through part of its economic adjustment costs to trading partners via higher export prices. As a consequence, the CO2 prices required to achieve the domestic emissions reduction target are higher, yielding more CO2 revenues that are recycled to households.

Suggested Citation

  • Christoph Boehringer & Thomas Rutherford & Jan Schneider, 2021. "The Incidence of CO2 Emissions Pricing Under Alternative International Market Responses A Computable General Equilibrium Analysis for Germany," Working Papers V-435-21, University of Oldenburg, Department of Economics, revised May 2021.
  • Handle: RePEc:old:dpaper:435
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

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    2. Amores, Antonio F. & Maier, Sofia & Ricci, Mattia, 2023. "Taxing household energy consumption in the EU: The tax burden and its redistributive effect," Energy Policy, Elsevier, vol. 182(C).
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    4. Richard S. J. Tol, 2023. "Navigating the energy trilemma during geopolitical and environmental crises," Papers 2301.07671, arXiv.org.
    5. Abuzayed, Anas & Hartmann, Niklas, 2022. "MyPyPSA-Ger: Introducing CO2 taxes on a multi-regional myopic roadmap of the German electricity system towards achieving the 1.5 °C target by 2050," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 310(C).
    6. Khan, Rabnawaz, 2023. "The impact of a new techno-nationalism era on eco-economic decoupling," Resources Policy, Elsevier, vol. 82(C).

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    Keywords

    computable general equilibrium; incidence; environmental taxes;
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