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Hauptverfasser: Cantore, Cristiano, Di Bartolomeo, Giovanni, Gaudio, Francesco Saverio
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.00142
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author Cantore, Cristiano
Di Bartolomeo, Giovanni
Gaudio, Francesco Saverio
author_facet Cantore, Cristiano
Di Bartolomeo, Giovanni
Gaudio, Francesco Saverio
contents This paper studies how household heterogeneity affects the level and cyclical behavior of the optimal carbon tax in a real economy. We demonstrate that an equity-efficiency trade-off arises due to income inequality and heterogeneity in the marginal disutility of pollution. Two scenarios are analyzed: one with unrestricted income redistribution to mitigate inequality and another where redistribution is constrained to carbon tax revenues. Our findings reveal that household heterogeneity and redistribution policies significantly shape the level and cyclical behavior of the optimal carbon tax, decoupling it from the social cost of carbon. When the planner prioritizes redistribution towards poorer households, the optimal tax rate is lower than in the unconstrained scenario, and its fluctuations are amplified by countercyclical inequality.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_00142
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Unequal Costs of Pollution: Carbon Tax, Inequality, and Redistribution
Cantore, Cristiano
Di Bartolomeo, Giovanni
Gaudio, Francesco Saverio
Theoretical Economics
This paper studies how household heterogeneity affects the level and cyclical behavior of the optimal carbon tax in a real economy. We demonstrate that an equity-efficiency trade-off arises due to income inequality and heterogeneity in the marginal disutility of pollution. Two scenarios are analyzed: one with unrestricted income redistribution to mitigate inequality and another where redistribution is constrained to carbon tax revenues. Our findings reveal that household heterogeneity and redistribution policies significantly shape the level and cyclical behavior of the optimal carbon tax, decoupling it from the social cost of carbon. When the planner prioritizes redistribution towards poorer households, the optimal tax rate is lower than in the unconstrained scenario, and its fluctuations are amplified by countercyclical inequality.
title The Unequal Costs of Pollution: Carbon Tax, Inequality, and Redistribution
topic Theoretical Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.00142