The Impact of Border Carbon Adjustments under Alternative Producer Responses
Author(s)
Winchester, Niven
DownloadMITJPSPGC_Rpt192.pdf (544.3Kb)
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Border carbon adjustments (BCAs) have been proposed to address leakage and competitiveness concerns. In traditional assessments, firms regard BCAs as output taxes rather than implicit emissions taxes. Using a stylized energy-economic model, we analyze the impact of BCAs for alternative producer responses. When firms view BCAs as an implicit emissions tax, the outcome depends on whether or not firms can differentiate production across destination markets. If firms are able to produce a low-emissions variety for regions imposing BCAs, results are similar to when firms regard BCAs as an output tax. If firms produce a single variety for all markets, BCAs result in larger leakage reductions than in standard approaches. We also find that BCAs are less effective at addressing competitive concerns in scenarios that result in larger leakage reductions.
Description
Abstract and PDF report are also available on the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change website (http://globalchange.mit.edu/)
Date issued
2011-02URI
http://globalchange.mit.edu/pubs/abstract.php?publication_id=2137http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/61770
Publisher
MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change
Citation
Report no. 192
Series/Report no.
;Report no. 192
The following license files are associated with this item: