A US Carbon Tax:Rationales and Impacts
Lawrence H. Goulder
Stanford University
Rationales for a Carbon Tax
• Relatively low-cost instrument for reducing greenhouse gas emissions
• Helps bring about equal marginal abatement costs across emitters (cf. traditional regulation)
• Compared with cap and trade, it avoids emissions-price volatility
• It yields revenue that (in principle) could be put to beneficial use• finance cuts in other, distortionary taxes
• revenue-neutral policy -> cut taxes contemporaneously• revenue-raising policy -> cut deficit and reduce need to raise future taxes
• finance new government expenditure
Estimated Marginal External Cost(“Social Cost of Carbon”)
Carbon Taxes Elsewhere
Potential Revenues of $20/ton Carbon Tax
Source: Congressional Budget Office (2012)
How Should It Be Designed?
• Relatively upstream
• Accounting for carbon in imported fuels
• Including a credit for captured carbon
Welfare Cost per Ton of CO2 AvoidedEquivalent Variation
Carbon tax of $33/ton in 2020 (implies 8.5 % reduction in CO2)
Source:Parry and Williams – Resources for the Future (2012)
Sector Impacts
b Percentage change in the present value of profits over the interval 2009-2030.c Percentage change in the present value of GDP over the interval 2009-2030.
Source: Goulder, Hafstead, and Dworsky (2010)
Source:Marron and Toder – Urban Inst. (2012)
Conclusions
Properly scaled carbon tax can yield efficiency gains
Revenues from reasonably scaled tax are large enough to finance several proposed tax cuts
Policy costs are much lower when revenues are recycled through cuts in marginal tax rates
Economic impacts:
• large share of cost is passed on to consumers
• impacts on producers are concentrated on• fossil fuel suppliers• industries that intensively use fossil-based fuels