The Political Economy of Mitigation and Adaptation
Abstract
In this paper, we acknowledge that the mitigation of and adaptation to climate change
have differential fiscal impacts. Whereas mitigation typically raises fiscal revenues, adaptation is costly to the taxpayer and to a greater extent the more distortionary the tax system is. In an OLG model with majority voting, we analyze how the choices of mitigation and
adaptation are distorted under a lump-sum and a distortionary income tax regime. We find that whenever emissions and adaptation exhibit stock characteristics, the levels of mitigation and adaptation are chosen inefficiently low in the political equilibrium under lump-sum taxation. By contrast, the political equilibrium may entail inefficiently high mitigation or inefficiently high adaptation (but not both simultaneously) if the tax system is distortionary. A calibration of our model to the German economy shows that both mitigation and adaptation can be expected to be inefficiently low in the political equilibrium. Furthermore, the standard assumption of a lump-sum tax system when analyzing mitigation and adaptation is found to underestimate the loss in utilitarian welfare relative to a distortionary tax system, although mitigation levels are generally higher under the latter regime.
Other description
JEL: D72, D78, H21, H23, Q58
Collections
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Date
2016-01Author
Habla, Wolfgang
Roeder, Kerstin
Keywords
adaptation
mitigation
political economy
Majority Voting
OLG
Environmental Taxes
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
643
Language
eng