Buffl

Kapitel 4

YL
by Yannick L.

wrum greift die Carbon Tax unterschiedlich in verschiedenen Ländern?

whereas a $25 a ton price would be more than enough for some countries (for example, China, India, and Russia) to meet their Paris Agreement pledges, in other cases (for example, Australia and Canada) even the $75 a ton carbon tax falls short.

This dispersion reflects cross-country differences in the stringency of mitigation pledges.

With a $75 a ton carbon tax, coal prices would typically rise by more than 200 percent above baseline levels in 2030, because coal has a high carbon content and its baseline price per unit of energy is currently low.

This is indeed the purpose of a carbon tax: promoting a switch from carbon-rich fuels by making them costlier.

In the case of mitigation policies, the costs occur because the policies cause (1) a shift to cleaner but costlier technologies and equipment than people or firms would otherwise prefer; and (2) a decline in overall economic activity because of higher energy prices.

The economic efficiency costs of a $50 a ton carbon tax are equivalent to less than 0.5 percent of GDP in 17 countries. For most G20 countries, these costs are lower than the domestic environmental benefits stemming from the same measure—fewer deaths from air pollution as well as reductions in traffic congestion and accidents—before even counting climate benefits.

The domestic environmental benefits are especially large for countries with especially severe air pollution, such as China, India, and Russia.


Author

Yannick L.

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