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Norwegian

Climate Policies, Distributional Effects and Transfers Between Rich and Poor Countries

Link to article:

[DOI] [PDF]

Authors:

Kverndokk, S.

Year:

2018

Reference:

International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics

Vol 12(2-3), 129-176

Summary

This paper studies the role of equity preferences and distribution in climate policies by presenting mechanisms and results from dynamic North–South models. If policy makers express preferences regarding the distributive outcome of policies, they may adopt climate policies that influence the distribution in their preferred direction. A better distribution of outcomes may result even in the absence of such preferences if there exist strategic reasons for transfers from the rich to the poor countries. We also present results concerning when such transfers do and do not work according to policy makers’ intentions. A transfer that proceeds from the poor to the rich countries is climate migration. This may have distributional consequences and possibly increase the incentives of the rich countries to implement climate policies that mitigate negative distributional effects, even if their main concern is with their own outcomes.

JEL:

D63, D64, E22, H23, Q54

Keywords:

Environmental economics: Climate Change, Climate Change, Economic Theory, Public Economics: Public Goods

Project:

Oppdragsgiver: Norges forskningsråd
Oppdragsgivers prosjektnr.: 209698
Frisch prosjekt: 3100 - Oslo Center for Research on Environmentally friendly Energy (CREE)

Oppdragsgiver: Norges forskningsråd
Oppdragsgivers prosjektnr.: 204559
Frisch prosjekt: 3173 - Intergenerational and intragenerational equity in climate policy