By Iain Murray on 6.1.07 @ 12:07AM
In "doing something" about global warming, carbon taxes are as useless as carbon trading schemes.
When it comes to "doing something" about global warming, two
approaches are usually trotted out. One is trading permits to emit
carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases. Yet it now appears
that most existing carbon trading schemes are vastly inefficient,
open to fraud, or both. Thus, it is worth looking at the other
option, a tax on carbon emissions, to be levied on gasoline and
most electricity use. A quick survey of the realities of carbon
taxes reveals that the game might not be worth the candle.
Economists attempt to account for the "social cost" of carbon
dioxide emissions -- that is, the economic value of the damages
caused by global warming that many attribute to CO2. Many studies
have shown wildly varying results due to the various uncertainties
surrounding the topic, and also depending on whether each study
takes mankind's innate ability to adapt and innovate into
account.
A leading expert in the economics of climate change, Dr. Richard
Tol, reviewed these studies and found that there were significant
uncertainties. He concluded that it "is unlikely that the marginal
damage costs of carbon dioxide emissions exceed $50/tC [dollars per
ton of carbon] and are likely to be substantially smaller than
that." One indicative smaller figure is $16/tC, which represents
the mean estimate of all the studies at a discount rate of 3
percent, which is consistent with how governments value future
costs and benefits. Because a ton of CO2 contains less than a third
of a ton of carbon, these figures translate to a maximum of $14 and
just under $5 respectively.
Another recent review, the "Stern Review," which was
commissioned by the British government, estimated the marginal
social cost per ton of CO2 emissions at $85. As Dr. Tol's research
shows, this is actually an outlier in the literature and outside
the mainstream of economic thought. Nevertheless, because the Stern
Review has been so widely cited, it needs consideration here.
Many economists believe that to account for those costs,
governments should levy a tax -- called a Pigou Tax after its
inventor, a 19th century British economist, Arthur Pigou -- to
deter or at least bring home to people the cost of their
activity.
How big would a Pigou Tax have to be to account for the social
cost of household electricity use? One megawatt hour (MWh) of
coal-fired electricity use produces 0.95 metric tons of CO2, so the
tax would need to be levied per kilowatt hour (KWh) of electricity
used, depending on the social cost of carbon used. At Stern's
figure of $85, the state should levy a tax of 8 cents per KWh. At
$14, the tax would be a cent-and-a-half, and at $5, a half
cent.
According to the 2001 census, the average American household
uses 10,660 (KWh) of electricity per year. This means that at the
social cost level of $85, the average household would see its
electricity bills rise by $852 a year. At $5, the increase would be
$53.
Turning to gasoline, a social cost of $85 per ton of CO2 implies
a gas tax of 74 cents per gallon, a cost of $14 implies a tax of 12
cents and $5 a tax of 4 cents. The average household uses 1,143
gallons of gas a year, which means that at the Stern Review level,
the household's annual fuel expenses would increase by $845. At the
social cost levels of $14 and $5, the bills would increase by $140
and $45.
For the average family on median income ($44,334), the extra
burden of energy taxation at the level implied by the Stern Review
would represent a loss of about 4 percent of total household income
-- an unconscionable rise in taxation that would need to be offset
with taxation reductions elsewhere. Taxation hikes at the more
realistic estimates of social cost, however, are unlikely to affect
consumer behavior. At the lowest, but still respectable, estimate
of social cost, bills would increase by a mere $98 a year, a sum
likely to be absorbed. The same is likely true of the $300 increase
implied by a social cost of $14.
The effectiveness of a Pigou tax in reducing carbon emissions is
questionable. A tax high enough to force reductions in energy use
would greatly burden the poor and obstruct economic growth, while a
lower tax is unlikely to lead to emissions reductions at all.
Attempting to moderate behavior through carbon pricing will
either fail or impose significant social costs of its own. If we
need to do something about global warming, it is to move on from
talking about forcibly reducing emissions and working instead to
see how we can reduce any possible impacts on the world. A rich and
resilient world will be better than one made poorer through
overpriced carbon constraints.
topics:
Taxes, Economics, Global Warming, Energy