4.7 Article

The general equilibrium impacts of carbon tax policy in China: A multi-model comparison

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 99, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105284

Keywords

Multi-model comparison; CGE model; Carbon tax; China

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFA0603600, 2017YFA0603602, 2016YFA0602500]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71461010701, 71690244, 71974186, 71733003, 41661144023, 71703027, 71925010, 71690241, 72073003, 51861135102, 71810107001]
  3. State Key Joint Laboratory of Environmental Simulation and Pollution Control, Peking University [21K04ESPCP]
  4. 111 Project Urban Air Pollution and Health Effects, Peking University [B20009]
  5. Volvo Group in a research project of the Research Center for Green Economy and Sustainable Development, Tsinghua University
  6. Harvard Global Institute

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We conducted a multi-model comparison of a carbon tax policy in China, finding that while the 2030 NDC target can easily be met in all models, the 2060 carbon neutrality goal cannot be achieved even with the highest carbon tax rates. The 8 CGE models differed substantially in terms of impacts on the macroeconomy, aggregate prices, energy use, carbon reductions, industry level output, and price effects.
We conduct a multi-model comparison of a carbon tax policy in China to examine how different models simulate the impacts in both near-term 2020, medium-term 2030, and distant future 2050. Though Top-down computable general equilibrium (CGE) models have been applied frequently on climate or other environmental/energy pol-icies to assess emission reduction, energy use and economy-wide general equilibrium outcomes in China, the re-sults often vary greatly across models, making it challenging to derive policies. We compare 8 China CGE models with different characteristics to examine how they estimate the effects of a plausible range of carbon tax scenar-ios - low, medium and high carbon taxes.. To make them comparable we impose the same population growth, the same GDP growth path and world energy price shocks. We find that the 2030 NDC target for China are easily met in all models, but the 2060 carbon neutrality goal cannot be achieved even with our highest carbon tax rates. Through this carbon tax comparison, we find all 8 CGE models differ substantially in terms of impacts on the macroeconomy, aggregate prices, energy use and carbon reductions, as well as industry level output and price effects. We discuss the reasons for the divergent simulation results including differences in model structure, sub-stitution parameters, baseline renewable penetration and methods of revenue recycling. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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