cover image: Fiscal Implications of Global Decarbonization

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Fiscal Implications of Global Decarbonization

1 Mar 2024

Internationally coordinated climate mitigation policies can effectively put the world on a path toward achieving the agreed Paris temperature goals. Such coordination could be initiated by large players, such as China, the US, India, the African Union, and the European Union. We find that the implications for fiscal revenues over time will be shaped by a combination of rising carbon prices, the gradual erosion of existing fuel tax bases, and possible revenue sharing arrangements. Public spending rises during the transition to build green public infrastructure, promote innovation, and support clean technology deployment. Countries will also need financing for compensating vulnerable households and industries, and to transfer funds to poor countries. With well-designed climate-fiscal policy relying on carbon pricing, global decarbonization will have anything from moderately positive to moderately negative impacts on fiscal balances in high-income countries. For middle and low-income countries, net fiscal impacts are generally positive and can be significant. Revenue sharing at the global level would make an historical contribution to breaching the financial divide between rich and poor countries.

Authors

Simon Black, Ruud de Mooij, Vitor Gaspar, Ian W.H. Parry, Karlygash Zhunussova

Format
Paper
Frequency
regular
ISBN
9798400269516
ISSN
1018-5941
Pages
36
Published in
United States of America
Series
Working Paper No. 2024/045
StockNumber
WPIEA2024045