One of the most pressing policy challenges facing the world today concerns how to mitigate global warming while improving people’s well-being. The green paradox argues that increasing taxes on CO2 emissions exacerbates global warming in the present because firms have the incentive to bring forward the extraction and sale of fossil fuels. This paper shows that whenever technological progress allows the extraction costs of fossil fuels to be reduced over time and a positive R&D subsidy is paid, a growing tax on CO2 emissions reveals a welfare maximizing policy.
Spinesi, L. (2012). Global Warming and Endogenous Technological Change: Revisiting the Green Paradox. ENVIRONMENTAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 51, 545-559 [10.1007/s10640-011-9511-9].
Global Warming and Endogenous Technological Change: Revisiting the Green Paradox
SPINESI, LUCA
2012-01-01
Abstract
One of the most pressing policy challenges facing the world today concerns how to mitigate global warming while improving people’s well-being. The green paradox argues that increasing taxes on CO2 emissions exacerbates global warming in the present because firms have the incentive to bring forward the extraction and sale of fossil fuels. This paper shows that whenever technological progress allows the extraction costs of fossil fuels to be reduced over time and a positive R&D subsidy is paid, a growing tax on CO2 emissions reveals a welfare maximizing policy.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.