The Green Paradox and Interjurisdictional Competition across Space and Time
Abstract
This paper demonstrates that unintended effects of climate policies (Green Paradox effects) also arise in general equilibrium when countries compete for mobile factors of production (capital and resources/energy). Second, it shows that countries have a rationale to use strictly positive source-based capital taxes to slow down resource extraction. Notably, this result comes about in the absence of any revenue requirements by the government, and independently of the elasticity of substitution between capital and resources in production. Third, the paper generalizes the results obtained by Eichner and Runkel (2012) by showing that the Nash equilibrium entails inefficiently high pollution.
Other description
JEL: E22, H23, H77, Q31, Q58
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-06Author
Habla, Wolfgang
Keywords
Green Paradox
factor mobility
interjurisdictional competition
resource extraction
substitutability between capital and resources
capital taxation
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
668
Language
eng