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The discussant is always the following speaker, with the first speaker being the discussant of the last paper. The last speaker of each session is the session chair. Presenters should use no more than 20 minutes; discussants no more than 5 minutes; the remaining time should be devoted to audience questions and the presenter’s responses. We suggest to follow these guidelines also for (uncommon) sessions with 3 papers in a 2-hour slot, to enable participants to switch sessions. We recommend that discussants avoid summarizing the paper. By focusing their brief remarks on a few questions and comments, the discussants can help start the general discussion with audience members. Only registered participants can attend this conference. Further information available on the congress website https://iipf2024.vse.cz/ .Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 30th Apr 2025, 05:03:46am CEST
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Session Overview |
Session | ||||
F16: Carbon & Fuel Taxes
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Presentations | ||||
Carbon Taxation In Emerging Economies 1MCC Berlin, Germany; 2University of Mannheim; 3University of Münster; 4Carnegie Mellon Unviersity; 5UNU-WIDER This paper delivers the first comprehensive analysis of how firms respond to carbon taxation in emerging economies. Our evidence builds on exhaustive administrative data from South Africa, the 13th largest emitter worldwide. The presented results are twofold. First, we establish stylized facts on the types of firms that are affected, how much revenue is generated from which sector and which share of national emissions the tax is able to capture. Second, we study the dynamic impact of the carbon tax on firm-level outcomes such as sales, profits, capital and labor inputs. We show that the design of the South African Carbon Tax leads to substantial heterogeneity across sectors in terms of how strongly firms are affected. Contrary to the concern that carbon taxes may impede economic growth we measure no negative effects on firm performance on average.
Carbon Costs And Industrial Firm Performance: Evidence From International Microdata 1CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis, The Netherlands; 2HHL Leipzig Graduate School of Management, Germany A central concern in climate policy making is that increasing carbon costs unilaterally would impair economic activity and competitiveness. Using comprehensive microdata, this paper provides first international firm-level evidence on the joint performance effects of carbon policies. Shadow prices of fossil energy sources are employed as an integral and internationally comparable measure of carbon costs. We evaluate the impact of carbon costs on various dimensions of economic activity for up to 3.1 million firms from 32 countries and 15 competitiveness-prone industrial sectors in the period 2000-2019. Carbon costs hardly hurt most industrial firms and predominantly elicited adaptation rather than relocation responses. Economically modest employment reductions were concentrated in capital-intensive firms and small firms in emissions-intensive, trade-exposed sectors, particularly in the EU. In these sectors, large and capital-intensive firms ramped up domestic investments in response to carbon cost increases, and small firms improved productivity. Profitability and exit probabilities were hardly affected.
Fuel Economy Standards and Public Transport 1ifo Institute for Economic Research, Germany; 2LMU Munich; 3CESifo We identify and examine a novel welfare channel of fuel economy standards through the interaction with public transit and households' location choices. A stricter emission standard for cars decreases the marginal cost of driving and triggers a shift in modal choice from public to private transport and a rise in carbon emissions. In the long run, the modal shift exacerbates the increase in the average commute length that results from lower driving costs, as well as traffic congestion. The annual welfare cost for a 50 percent emission reduction turns out 3.7 percent (24 USD p.c.) higher than when neglecting public transport. With a larger role of public transport as in Europe, this effect rises to 11.4 percent (72 USD p.c.). An alternative fuel tax policy, by contrast, induces a modal shift towards public transport and reduces the average commute, urban congestion and the welfare cost of emission reductions.
Fuel Taxes, Driving, and Co2 Emissions: Quasi-experimental Evidence 1University of Helsinki, Finland; 2Tampere University; 3VATT Institute for Economic Research; 4Aalto University; 5Finnish Centre of Excellence in Tax Systems Research This paper studies the effects of a significant fuel tax increase on driving and CO2 emissions. Despite the prevalence of fuel taxes, causal evidence of the effect of fuel taxes on driving and emissions is limited, and the reasons why existing estimates vary remain unexplored. Our research directly addresses these gaps in the literature by exploiting exogenous variation provided by Finland’s 2012 energy tax reform. The reform increased the tax on diesel by almost 12 euro cents per litre, while the tax on gasoline was increased by less than 3 euro cents per litre. The reform allows us to utilize a quasi-experimental setting and compare the kilometers travelled by diesel and gasoline-powered cars to identify the impacts of fuel taxes. We employ a large data set of over 2.2 million cars and their odometer readings. Our credibly causal estimates indicate a clear reduction in the kilometers driven by diesel cars.
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