TY - UNPB
T1 - Financial and fiscal environmental regulation in a credit cycle model
AU - Kubin, Ingrid
AU - Zörner, Thomas O.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - We augment an overlapping generations endogenous credit cycle model with an environmental sector and study the interplay between fiscal and financial environmental regulation, which ultimately affects environmental quality, macroeconomic stability, and income distribution. We define environmental quality as the amount of pollution emitted, which can be regulated either by financial constraints on polluting projects (environmental haircuts) or by tax-financed investment in abatement and improvement technologies. We find that environmental haircuts and environmental taxes each affect emissions and income distribution in unique ways, with interaction effects that reveal trade-offs between economic stability, income, and environmental outcomes. Compared to scenarios in which only financial regulations are implemented, the introduction of a supplementary environmental tax on emissions maintains similar environmental standards, but leads to higher total income and capital per worker. However, this shift in income distribution favors green investors, while the older generation, which relies more on capital income, may experience an overall decrease in net income.
AB - We augment an overlapping generations endogenous credit cycle model with an environmental sector and study the interplay between fiscal and financial environmental regulation, which ultimately affects environmental quality, macroeconomic stability, and income distribution. We define environmental quality as the amount of pollution emitted, which can be regulated either by financial constraints on polluting projects (environmental haircuts) or by tax-financed investment in abatement and improvement technologies. We find that environmental haircuts and environmental taxes each affect emissions and income distribution in unique ways, with interaction effects that reveal trade-offs between economic stability, income, and environmental outcomes. Compared to scenarios in which only financial regulations are implemented, the introduction of a supplementary environmental tax on emissions maintains similar environmental standards, but leads to higher total income and capital per worker. However, this shift in income distribution favors green investors, while the older generation, which relies more on capital income, may experience an overall decrease in net income.
KW - Green transition
KW - environmental regulation
KW - economic stability
KW - income distribution
KW - nonlinear model
U2 - 10.57938/47cf5aec-7e5c-4777-acbe-ebaffebb7d19
DO - 10.57938/47cf5aec-7e5c-4777-acbe-ebaffebb7d19
M3 - WU Working Paper
T3 - Department of Economics Working Paper Series
BT - Financial and fiscal environmental regulation in a credit cycle model
PB - WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
ER -