Public Debt Dynamics During the Climate Transition
Daniel Garcia-Macia,
Waikei Lam and
Anh Nguyen
No 2024/071, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
Managing the climate transition presents policymakers with a tradeoff between achieving climate goals, fiscal sustainability, and political feasibility, which calls for a fiscal balancing act with the right mix of policies. This paper develops a tractable dynamic general equilibrium model to quantify the fiscal impacts of various climate policy packages aimed at reaching net zero emissions by mid-century. Our simulations show that relying primarily on spending measures to deliver on climate ambitions will be costly, possibly raising debt by 45-50 percent of GDP by 2050. However, a balanced mix of carbon-pricing and spending-based policies can deliver on net zero with a much smaller fiscal cost, limiting the increase in public debt to 10-15 percent of GDP by 2050. Carbon pricing is central not only as an effective tool for emissions reduction but also as a revenue source. Delaying carbon pricing action could increase costs, especially if less effective measures are scaled up to meet climate targets. Technology spillovers can reduce the costs but bottlenecks in green investment could unwind the gains and slow the transition.
Keywords: Climate change; mitigation; public debt; carbon pricing; subsidies; public investment; industrial policies; dynamic general equilibrium.; technology spillover; investment bottleneck; No. 2024/71; mix of carbon-pricing; adjustment cost parameter; Emerging and frontier financial markets; Climate finance; Climate policy; Global (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 27
Date: 2024-03-29
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge, nep-ene and nep-env
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