Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1054940 Global Environmental Change 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The fact that developing countries do not have carbon emission caps under the Kyoto Protocol has led to the current interest in high income countries in border taxes on the ‘virtual’ carbon content of imports. We use GTAP data and input–output analysis to estimate the flows of virtual carbon implicit in domestic production technologies and the pattern of international trade. The results present striking evidence on the wide variation in the carbon-intensiveness of trade across countries, with major developing countries being large net exporters of virtual carbon. Our analysis suggests that a tax on virtual carbon could lead to very substantial effective tariff rates on the exports of the most carbon-intensive developing nations. As an illustration, we find that average tariff rates of 10%, 8% and 12% would be faced by imports from China, India and South Africa if carbon is taxed at $50/ton CO2. Moreover, there is wide variation in intensiveness across sectors within countries with implications for the disparate effective tariff burdens on particulars parts of the economies of these countries. Such empirical findings, we argue, are useful for framing on-going discussions about the principles and practice of border taxes on virtual carbon.

Research highlights► Investigation of border taxes on virtual (or embodied) carbon using input–output analysis. ► Analysis of net flows of virtual carbon from the major developing countries to high income countries. ► Calculation of effective tariffs on virtual carbon embodied in imports. ► Tariff rates faced by developing country exports could be significant. ► Specific tradable sectors could face particularly high tariff burdens.

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Science (General)
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