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November 1, 2007

Cap-and-trade bookkeeping

In testimony today to the House budget committee, Peter Orszag, the head of the Congressional Budget Office, makes an interesting point about the fiscal implications of a cap-and-trade regime for carbon emissions. Suppose carbon permits are given away to suppliers and industrial users of energy. The proper way to score them in that event–"a solid case can be made", is how Orszag puts it–would be to count the value of  the permits as both revenues and outlays, as though the beneficiaries had bought the allowances at value and then been handed the money straight back. What difference would that make? None to the budget deficit, or to the price signal for carbon abatement. But it would show a rise in public spending in the form of grants to the companies concerned. That would presumably alter the politics, and for the better.

Thanks to Greg Mankiw for the CBO link. Greg sums the issue up this way, in his "fundamental theorem of carbon taxation":

cap-and-trade = carbon tax + corporate welfare

So those who say a carbon tax is politically impossible are not quite right. If we go to cap-and-trade, we will have one. It will be hidden, and most likely badly designed, but we will have one. That is why an even more solid case can be made for auctioning the permits, rather than giving them away. And the most solid case of all is the one for a straightforward carbon tax.

2 Responses to “Cap-and-trade bookkeeping”

Comments

  1. A carbon tax may be “perfect”, but it is not possible. A cap-and-trade system is possible, but, as you point out, far from perfect. That gives me hope that an auction-based cap-and-trade scheme might work out as a compromise–not perfect, but not bad, and not impossible.

    Posted by: jawbone | November 1st, 2007 at 9:32 pm | Report this comment
  2. The big problem with the carbon tax being the same problem all Pigouvian taxes have — how does one tinker with the tax to have it produce the desired quantity of production? That requires way more information than just auctioning off a finite number of permits.

    Posted by: Punditus Maximus | November 1st, 2007 at 9:52 pm | Report this comment

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