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April 17, 2009 |  6 comments |  Print | E-Mail Your Opinion  

Jakob  von Weizsäcker

Greening the Debt

Jakob von Weizsäcker: It is still possible to stop climate change in this current economic environment. Governments should “green the debt” from their fiscal stimulus packages by repaying it with proceeds from higher carbon taxes and cap and trade systems, improving both economic and environmental sustainability.

The global economic crisis and climate change are probably the two signature challenges of our time. Luckily, there are ways to make our responses to these challenges mutually reinforcing.

One approach is to green the expenditures of the fiscal stimulus packages, as called for by the final communiqué of the G20 summit. But the room for maneuver here is limited. An estimated 15 percent of the stimulus packages are already green. And because it is the primary objective of the fiscal stimulus to support the economy in the short run, it is not possible to devote a much larger proportion to the longer term objective of fighting climate change.

However, there is another way to green the stimulus: greening the enormous additional debt due to deficit spending. In 2009 alone, European Union countries will pile up a stimulus debt of around €115 billion, or 0.9 percent of GDP, with the United States adding twice as much - an estimated €220 billon, or 2 percent of GDP. These debts could be "greened" by a firm international commitment to repay them exclusively with additional revenues from CO2 taxes and emissions cap and trade schemes.

This is what I propose should be done.

The additional green revenues would be raised as soon as economies recover enough to repay the stimulus debts. The time-path of debt repayment could be explicitly linked to the timing of the economic recovery. And once the stimulus debt has been repaid, the green revenues would be used to reduce the fiscal burden on labor. Such a shift from taxation that reduces desirable employment to taxation that reduces undesirable pollution will lead to welfare gains.

The envisaged increase in green revenues is ambitious, but not utopian. In the European Union, green taxes already make up 2.6 percent of GDP - substantially more than the annual size of the stimulus packages to date. Green tax revenues in the United States are far lower, but the Obama administration is already working on a cap-and-trade scheme that could generate the required revenues.

Repaying stimulus debt through green taxes has a number of advantages:

First, there are efficiency reasons to complement the carrot of green subsidies with the stick of green taxes. The latter clearly addresses the underlying problem, namely that private agents do not fully take into account the negative climate externality of CO2 emissions. By contrast, the carrot of green subsidies is better suited to dealing with a narrower and positive externality - the spill-over effects of technological innovation aimed at reducing CO2 emissions.

Second, green revenues not only improve environmental but also fiscal sustainability. A credible commitment by countries under fiscal pressure on how they will repay their debts could serve to reassure financial markets. Even countries like Ireland without the fiscal room for maneuver for discretionary fiscal measures might be tempted to participate in the greening of part of its debt.

Third, green debt makes the case for coordination of fiscal stimuli even more compelling. Such coordination could address fiscal and environmental free-riding at the same time: All countries that commit to a fiscal stimulus would thereby automatically commit to increase their CO2 taxes at a later stage to service their green debt.

Only a couple of years ago, this proposal would have been completely unrealistic. Ironically, the threat to fiscal sustainability during this economic crisis may be decisive in helping our economies to move toward environmental sustainability.

Jakob von Weizsäcker is a resident scholar with Bruegel, a think tank in Brussels partly funded by 16 EU member governments.

This article was first published by the International Herald Tribune and is reproduced here with permission from the author.

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Michael  Schuster

April 17, 2009

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This is an excellent plan!

But: Will governments pay back the debt? It seems to me that governments always find excuse to keep their budget big rather than reducing the debt. I am afraid we will have to wait very long until this green tax will be reaped.
 
Jan-Friedrich  Kallmorgen

June 29, 2009

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Thanks, Jacob, for once again these very interesting thoughts. The green debt idea should definitely be given more room in the US-German context. Here, the transatlantic climate bridge is a good forum. From there, Washington and Berlin could push the issue on the G20 agenda.
 
Unregistered User

June 14, 2010

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Such coordination could address fiscal and environmental free-riding at the same time: once the stimulus debt has been repaid, the green revenues would be used to reduce the fiscal burden on labor.
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June 15, 2010

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cristina  brown

July 6, 2010

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This is a wonderful opinion. The things mentioned are unanimous and
needs to be appreciated by everyone.
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Member deleted

July 6, 2010

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I personally tend to presume at the outset that such an approach may be one of the best options available to tackle the climate change. However the basic ideas presented by the author needs to elaborated in detail regarding in particular how each country, who is willing to go along with it, is to implement it.

As each country have her own model of fiscal system in effect, there is needed a great deal of work to be done yet before implementation both at the level of G-20 as well as at the levels of the individual participant countries.

On the other hand although Jacob’s proposition is a noteworthy solution in this direction, I also think that other specialists with various background are needed to propose alternate approaches for consideration -without being side-tracked from the objective.

Thus at the G-20 level, the member countries may be offered a menu of options to choose from to suit their interests best in dealing with such a complicated problem.

The complexity of the problem at hand to be resolved may necessitate it that prior work to be undertaken by expert groups before this matter to be brought up to the G-20 Summit. Having completed some groundwork prior to the Summit may crystallize out as a long lasting and to-be-successful set of principles at the level of the decision makers.

I think some members here may find the method of approach I suggested above too time consuming but on the bases of the great volume of flow of funds being in question to be allocated in medium or long term periods, some similar approach may be rather effective handling a case like this.
 

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