The trade-off between intra-and intergenerational equity in climate policy

Abstract

This paper focuses on two equity dimensions of climate policy, intra- and intergenerational, and analyzes the implications of equity preferences on climate policy, and on the production and consumption patterns in rich and poor countries. We develop a dynamic two-region model, in which each region suffers from global warming, but also has an inequality aversion over current consumption allocations. Inequality aversion generally lifts the consumption path of the poor region, while the rich region must take a greater share of the climate burden. Furthermore, with inequality aversion, the optimal climate policy generally leads to higher investment in clean capital in the North and in dirty capital in the South, thereby allowing the South to pollute more and develop faster. The optimal policy may even require the poor region to increase emissions relative to the uncoordinated Business-as-Usual case. Introducing local pollution and transfers confirm the main results.

Publication
European Economic Review, Vol. 69, 40-58.
Linda Nøstbakken
Linda Nøstbakken
Economist and Research Director

Environmental and natural resource economist. Research director at Statistics Norway and professor at the Norwegian School of Economics (NHH).