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Optimal Climate Change Policies When Governments Cannot Commit
Authors:Alistair Ulph  David Ulph
Institution:1. Sustainable Consumption Institute, The University of Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK
2. Scottish Institute for Research in Economics (SIRE), St Andrews, Fife, Scotland, UK
3. School of Economics & Finance, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife, KY16 9AL, Scotland, UK
Abstract:We analyse the optimal design of climate change policies when a government wants to encourage the private sector to undertake significant immediate investment in developing cleaner technologies, but the relevant carbon taxes (or other environmental policies) that would incentivise such investment by firms will be set in the future. We assume that the current government cannot commit to long-term carbon taxes, and so both it and the private sector face the possibility that the government in power in the future may give different (relative) weight to environmental damage costs. We show that this lack of commitment has a significant asymmetric effect: it increases the social benefits of the current government to have the investment undertaken, but reduces the private benefit to the private sector to invest. Consequently the current government may need to use additional policy instruments—such as R&D subsidies—to stimulate the required investment.
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