Carbon emissions reduction strategies and poverty alleviation in India
This paper, based on a computable general equilibrium model of the Indian economy, shows that a domestic carbon tax policy that recycles carbon tax revenues to households imposes heavy costs in terms of lower economic growth and higher poverty. However, the decline in economic growth and rise in poverty can be minimized if the emissions restriction target is modest, and carbon tax revenues are transferred exclusively to the poor. India's participation in an internationally tradable emission permits regime with grandfathered emissions allocation is preferable to any domestic carbon tax option, provided the world market price of emission permits remains low. Even better would be if India participated in a global system of tradable emission permits with equal per capita emission entitlements. India would then be able to use the revenues garnered from the sale of surplus permits to speed up its economic growth and poverty reduction and yet keep its per capita emissions below the 1990 per capita global emissions level.
| Year of publication: |
2009
|
|---|---|
| Authors: | OJHA, VIJAY P. |
| Published in: |
Environment and Development Economics. - Cambridge University Press. - Vol. 14.2009, 03, p. 323-348
|
| Publisher: |
Cambridge University Press |
| Description of contents: | Abstract [journals.cambridge.org] |
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