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Have most North Americans already met their Kyoto Obligations? - Trends in the CO 2 content of Expenditure and the role of Income Inequality. Lars Osberg.

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Presentation on theme: "Have most North Americans already met their Kyoto Obligations? - Trends in the CO 2 content of Expenditure and the role of Income Inequality. Lars Osberg."— Presentation transcript:

1 Have most North Americans already met their Kyoto Obligations? - Trends in the CO 2 content of Expenditure and the role of Income Inequality. Lars Osberg Economics Department Dalhousie University Canadian Economics Association Vancouver, June 6, 2008

2 Who is responsible for rising CO 2 ? Who should pay for reduction in CO 2 ?  Kyoto Protocol Collective obligation to reduce Canada’s CO 2 emissions to 6% below 1990  USA target =-7% (not ratified)  What is the corresponding obligation of individuals ?  Who has fulfilled that obligation ?  Income Gains concentrated in top 1% $ real income stagnant for most  GHG intensity per dollar much improved  Most Canadians have met personal Kyoto But population has grown – Alberta, BC, Ontario “Provincialization” of Kyoto commitments ??

3 Delivering on a collective commitment - perceived equity in burden sharing is essential to actual implementation  “We didn’t create this problem – so why should we pay for its solution?” LDC lament – also true within Canada & US  Complexity of ‘Cap & Trade’ & many Carbon Tax proposals fuel cynicism re: “Tax Grab” “Double Dividend” or “No Dividend” ?  Carbon Tax + Full refund as Demo-grant Easy calculation net benefits = majority win!  $30 per ton CO 2 ≈ +7 cents litre gasoline Small relative to recent price increases  Increasing marginal political cost ??

4 Trends in Average Income by Quintile 1989 – 2005 CANSIM V1546479 – V1546483

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6 Real Income Gains - also concentrated in top 20% in USA

7 Substantial Improvement in GHG intensity per $ expenditure

8 Stagnant Income + improved CO 2 Intensity = Kyoto Attainment for most  Kyoto – a ‘point of production’ accounting system  But exporting a steel plant does not reduce world’s CO 2 emissions or assist Global Warming  This paper - assigns households CO 2 emissions caused by own spending  Direct consumption of carbon energy +  Indirect consumption embodied in commodities Production, transportation & distribution Should include CO 2 content of imports, investment, government spending  Proportional to Household Income

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10 Income Changes and their implications for GHG - Canada 1992 - 2004 abcdefg income class 1992 income tons CO2 1992 Kyoto Target 2004 income tons CO2 % below /above Kyoto average $000at 0.84(tons) average $000at 0.71 [@6% reduction] bottom 80%33.7528.426.63726.27 -1.4% 80 - 90 percentile8873.969.510171.71 3.2% top 10%160134.4126.3215152.65 20.8% top 1%404339.4319.0684485.64 52.2% top 0.1%11961004.6944.424931770.03 87.4% Top 0.01%34902931.62755.784435994.53 117.5%

11 Population Increase ≈ + 20% nationally  1990 – 2006 population growth Nil to small in Nfld, NS, PEI, NB, Quebec, Man, Sask.  ALL GHG increase due to top end income distribution Ontario +23%; BC + 30%; Alberta +33%  Income Distribution + Population Growth drives increase in GHG emissions  “Provincialization” of CO 2 policy?  BC, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, NS have announced provincial targets Slow growth provinces have far easier Kyoto task Which collectivity made commitment to reducing GHG emissions?

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13 How to attract public support for efficient policy to reduce CO 2 emissions?  Carbon Tax or ‘Cap and Trade’ Both use decentralized incentives of market  Increase price of Carbon Energy Both are regressive in Income Distributional Impact

14 Transparency + Equity Rebate Carbon Tax as Demo-grant  Who gets the CO 2 scarcity rents?  2005 – 747 Megatonnes @ $30 per ton implies $22 Billion ‘Cap & Trade’  HUGE wealth transfers within corporate sector Carbon Tax  Revenue available to government to offset regressive impact of price increase  Demo-grant ≈ $680  Net Benefit for most households Marginal incentive to conservation preserved

15 Delivering on a collective commitment - perceived equity in burden sharing is essential to actual implementation  “We didn’t create this problem – so why should we pay for its solution?” LDC lament – also true within Canada & US  Complexity of ‘Cap & Trade’ & many Carbon Tax proposals fuel cynicism re: “Tax Grab” “Double Dividend” or “No Dividend” ?  Carbon Tax + Full refund as Demo-grant Easy calculation net benefits = majority win!  $30 per ton CO 2 ≈ +7 cents litre gasoline Small relative to recent price increases  Increasing marginal political cost ??

16 Ontario  Ontario: 1990-2005 mr & mrs80%  income increase = +7.5% But GHG intensity decrease by 17.8% (.84 ->.69)  decrease of 12% in GHG per capita GDP = + 24.5%  per capita GDP*GHG = +2.2%  Implication:income dist => +14.2% GHG * GDP = + 24.7% population increase = + 23.2% GDP increase = + 51.9%


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