Research Seminar: Armon Rezai

Title: "THIRD‐BEST CARBON TAXATION: Trading off emission cuts, equity, and efficiency"

  • Date: 18 July 2024 from 10:00 to 11:15

  • Event location: Seminar Room - Piazza Scaravilli, 2 + Microsoft Teams Meeting

Abstract

We present a model of green tax reform: third-best carbon taxation that corrects an environmental externality and the revenue of which is used to maximise social welfare given constraints that an income tax needs to be levied but cannot be fully optimised. The model’s Exact Affine Stone Index (EASI) demand system and labour supply and income tax schedules are estimated from German consumption expenditure data, allowing for heterogeneity across households. We combine this with a model of households’ and firms’ carbon emissions to obtain a micro-based simulation model. The government sets a carbon tax to correct damages from emissions and chooses to rebate the revenue lump-sum or by adjusting existing income taxes. Pricing carbon cuts emissions and rebating its revenue fully as lump-sum climate dividends improves equity but is costly since the negative effects of carbon taxation on the real consumer wage and labour supply cannot be mitigated. Using tax revenue to fund income tax reform improves efficiency. We find that the government sets the “third-best” carbon tax above the Pigouvian level at our preferred value of public inequality aversion and that it distributes carbon tax revenue fully as dividends irrespective of inequality aversion. The carbon tax, climate dividends, and the progressivity of the income tax rise with inequality aversion. We decompose the welfare effects of policy into emissions, equity, and efficiency components for different degrees of inequality aversion and climate damages.