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Political influence on non-cooperative international climate policy
Authors:Wolfgang Habla  Ralph Winkler
Institution:1. Department of Economics, University of Munich and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern Ludwigstraße 28, DE-80539 Munich, Germany;2. Department of Economics and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern Schanzeneckstrasse 1, CH-3001 Bern, Switzerland
Abstract:We analyze non-cooperative international climate policy in a setting of political competition by national interest groups. In the first stage, countries decide whether to link their domestic emission permit markets to an international market, which only forms if it is supported by all countries. In the second stage, countries non-cooperatively decide on the number of tradable emission allowances. In both stages, special interest groups try to sway the government in their favor. We find that (i) both the choice of regime and the levels of domestic and global emissions only depend on the aggregate levels of organized stakes in all countries and not on their distribution among individual interest groups and (ii) an increase in lobbying influence by a particular lobby group may backfire by inducing a change towards the lobby group's less preferred regime.
Keywords:Non-cooperative climate policy  Political economy  Emissions trading  Environmental awareness
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