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Cost-effective unilateral climate policy design: Size matters
Authors:Christoph Böhringer  Carolyn Fischer  Knut Einar Rosendahl
Institution:1. Department of Economics at the University of Oldenburg, Germany;2. Resources for the Future, 1616 P Street, Washington, DC 20036, USA;3. School of Economics and Business at Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Ås, Norway
Abstract:Given the bleak prospects for a global agreement on mitigating climate change, pressure for unilateral abatement is increasing. A major challenge is emissions leakage. Border carbon adjustments and output-based allocation of emissions allowances can increase effectiveness of unilateral action but introduce distortions of their own. We assess antileakage measures as a function of abatement coalition size. We first develop a partial equilibrium analytical framework to see how these instruments affect emissions within and outside the coalition. We then employ a computable general equilibrium model of international trade and energy use to assess the strategies as the coalition grows. We find that full border adjustments rank first in global cost-effectiveness, followed by import tariffs and output-based rebates. The differences across measures and their overall appeal decline as the abatement coalition grows. In terms of cost, the coalition countries prefer border carbon adjustments; countries outside the coalition prefer output-based rebates.
Keywords:Emissions leakage  Border carbon adjustments  Output-based rebates
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