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Dynamic carbon dioxide taxation with revenue recycling

Journal of Cleaner Production, 2021
Abstract The accumulation of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has global impacts via changing weather patterns and increasing average temperatures. These emissions, while globally important, are largely the result of decisions made at a more microeconomic level - the result of individual consumption preferences and production technologies used to ...
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CLIMATE CLUBS WITH TAX REVENUE RECYCLING, TARIFFS, AND TRANSFERS

Climate Change Economics, 2020
The E3ME-FTT model is applied to assess the impacts of alternative climate club structures. We consider two kinds of climate club memberships: the World Climate Club (WCC), where every country in the world joins the club, and the Core Climate Club (CCC), with seven likely club members: EU[Formula: see text][Formula: see text][Formula: see text]5 ...
DAIGEE SHAW, YU-HSUAN FU
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Pollution Taxes and Revenue Recycling

Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 1995
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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Pollution Taxation and Revenue Recycling under Monopoly Unions

The Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 1998
A model where a given number of firms determine their pollution‐reducing production technologies upon establishment and workers form monopoly unions is used to study the possibility of “double dividends”, i.e., simultaneous reductions in pollution and increases in employment, when the pollution tax is increased, and tax revenues recycled, in ...
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Carbon Tax and Revenue Recycling: Impacts on Households in British Columbia

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2014
Abstract This study investigates the distributional implications of the revenue-neutral carbon tax policy in British Columbia. We use a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model of the Canadian economy and disaggregate households into deciles by annual income using data from a large household expenditure survey.
Marisa Beck   +3 more
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Taxing Carbon and Recycling the Revenue: Who Wins and Loses?

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2015
This Tax Fact explores the distributional impact of taxing carbon dioxide to combat climate change and in recycling the revenues into tax cuts.
Donald B. Marron   +2 more
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Three-Tiered E-Waste Recycling Supply Chains Based on Revenue Sharing

2008 IEEE Symposium on Advanced Management of Information for Globalized Enterprises (AMIGE), 2008
Recently, managing e-waste has become an important target for domestic and international material cycles from the viewpoints of environmental preservation and resource utilization efficiency. This paper concerns on the coordination issue of a three-tiered e-waste recycling supply chain with a recycling centre, a product responsibility provider (PRP ...
Zhiduan Xu, Xiaobin Xue
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Can Revenue Recycling Kill Green Technology?

Carbon tax revenue recycling – returning tax revenue to firms or households that are covered by the carbon tax – can potentially increase political acceptance for carbon taxation and prevent undesirable distributional outcomes and off-shoring. This paper uses a stylized theoretical model to analyze the long-run effects of carbon tax revenue recycling ...
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Resource taxation and regional planning: revenue recycling for local sustainability in the aggregates sector

Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 2013
We address the possible outcomes of combining environmental taxes and environmental planning in managing non-renewable resources such as aggregates. We empirically investigate resource taxation issues by focusing on aggregate extraction policy in two large northern Italian regions, Lombardy and Emilia-Romagna.
MAZZANTI, Massimiliano, R. Zoboli
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Public Finance Options for Recycling Carbon Tax Revenue in Germany

FinanzArchiv
We use a micro simulation model for Germany to show that it is optimal to use part of carbon tax revenue for handing out climate dividends, part to lower income taxes, and part to make up for public revenue shortfalls. The optimal recycling mix is tilted towards climate dividends away from tax reductions as relative inequality aversion increases.
Frederick van der Ploeg   +2 more
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