The Distributional Effects of a China Carbon Tax: A Rural–Urban Assessment
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
In September 2009, the National Development and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Finance of China—the country that emits the most greenhouse gases—issued a report on the necessity and feasibility of imposing carbon taxes in the country. The Commission also explored a tax design. In this study, we use input–output analysis to examine the scenario presented in that report, and attempt to measure the potential distributional impact of carbon taxes on Chinese residents. The results suggest that a carbon tax in China would be regressive in urban areas but progressive in rural ones, and that rural areas are more heavily burdened than urban areas. In addition, given that most policy options with regard to revenue-recycling—as implemented in industrialized countries— are not feasible in China, we show that lowering the electricity prices for households would be a practical approach that would lighten the burden on poor urban households and narrow the rural– urban disparity in tax burden. This would offset the adverse distributional effects of the carbon tax.
- 国立大学法人 京都大学大学院経済学研究科の論文
著者
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Ueta Kazuhiro
Professor, Graduate School of Economics and Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies, Kyoto University
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Ueta Kazuhiro
Professor, Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University
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Sun Wenjun
Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University
関連論文
- Impact of Environmental Regulation on Productivity: Case Studies of Three Industries in Japan
- The Distributional Effects of a China Carbon Tax: A Rural–Urban Assessment