Distributional Impacts in a Comprehensive Climate Policy Package
Gilbert Metcalf,
Aparna Mathur () and
Kevin Hassett
No 16101, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
This paper provides a simple analytic approach for measuring the burden of carbon pricing that does not require sophisticated and numerically intensive economic models but which is not limited to restrictive assumptions of forward shifting of carbon prices. We also show how to adjust for the capital income bias contained in the Consumer Expenditure Survey, a bias towards regressivity in carbon pricing due to underreporting of capital income in higher income deciles in the Survey. Many distributional analyses of carbon pricing focus on the uses-side incidence of carbon pricing. This is the differential burden resulting from heterogeneity in consumption across households. Once one allows for sources-side incidence (i.e. differential impacts of changes in real factor prices), carbon policies look more progressive. Perhaps more important than the findings from any one scenario, our results on the progressivity of the leading cap and trade proposals are robust to the assumptions made on the relative importance of uses and sources side heterogeneity.
JEL-codes: H22 H23 Q48 Q54 Q58 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010-06
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ene, nep-env and nep-res
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (23)
Published as Distributional Impacts in a Comprehensive Climate Policy Package , Gilbert E. Metcalf, Aparna Mathur, Kevin A. Hassett. in The Design and Implementation of US Climate Policy , Fullerton and Wolfram. 2012
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Related works:
Chapter: Distributional Impacts in a Comprehensive Climate Policy Package (2011) 
Working Paper: Distributional Impacts in a Comprehensive Climate Policy Package (2010) 
Working Paper: Distributional Impacts in a Comprehensive Climate Policy Package (2010) 
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