Environment
Study of wolves will help scientists predict climate effects on endangered animals — Scientists studying populations of grey wolves in the USA's Yellowstone National Park have developed a way to predict how changes in the environment will impact on the animals' number,…
Climate sensitivity to CO2 more limited than extreme projections — A new study suggests that the rate of global warming from doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide may be less than the most dire estimates of some previous studies - and, in fact, may…
Saving Da Vinci's Last Supper from air pollution — Having survived long centuries, political upheaval, and even bombings during World War II, Leonardo Da Vinci's masterpiece Last Supper now faces the risk of damage from air pollution…
After 25 years, sustainability is a growing science that's here to stay — Sustainability has not only become a science in the past 25 years, but it is one that continues to be fast-growing with widespread international collaboration, broad disciplinary composition…
Markets drive conservation in Central Africa — Certification has shown that commercial forestry can co-exist with conservation objectives in the Congo Basin, according to conclusions reached at an international seminar 'Forest management…
Great Plains river basins threatened by pumping of aquifers — Suitable habitat for native fishes in many Great Plains streams has been significantly reduced by the pumping of groundwater from the High Plains aquifer - and scientists analysing…
Rivers may aid climate control in cities — Speaking at the URSULA (Urban River Corridors and Sustainable Living Agendas) Conference, in Sheffield, Dr Abigail Hathway, of the University of Sheffield, will demonstrate how rivers…
Vultures dying at alarming rate — Vultures in South Asia were on the brink of extinction until Lindsay Oaks and Richard Watson, from The Peregrine Fund in the US, undertook observational and forensic studies to find…
Predicting future threats for global amphibian biodiversity — Amphibian populations are declining worldwide, and their declines far exceed those of other animal groups: more than 30% of all species are listed as threatened according to the Red…
Study shows deforestation causes cooling — Deforestation, considered by scientists to contribute significantly to global warming, has been shown by a Yale-led team to actually cool the local climate in northern latitudes, according…
Where am I? > Home > News > Environment

Pollution tax rebates little help for low-income workers

Science Centric | 22 February 2011 23:12 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Decrease text size Increase text size
DON'T MISS —
The response of marine algae to climate change
The response of marine algae to climate change — A new project at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in the Helmholtz Association dealing with the…
Modern physics critical to global warming research
Modern physics critical to global warming research — Science has come a long way with predicting climate. Increasingly sophisticated models and instruments can zero in on a specific…
More Environment

Although policymakers believe the regressiveness of pollution taxes can be offset by returning revenue to the low paid through a reduced labour tax, that approach may not work, and also could have the unintended consequence of shrinking some workers' overall real net wages, according to research by a University of Illinois energy policy expert.

Don Fullerton, a finance professor and former deputy assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury Department, says that using revenue from pollution taxes to lessen its regressiveness on low-wage workers is not enough to offset higher commodity prices and shrunken real wages that would result from such a tax.

'Revenue from a carbon tax would certainly help, but it wouldn't be enough to protect low-wage households from any harm,' said Fullerton, a researcher in the U. of I. Institute of Government and Public Affairs and the Centre for Business and Public Policy in the College of Business. 'A carbon tax is going to have costs, and while we might be able to play with the distributional burden of the costs, it's hard to protect low-income workers completely. There may just not be enough money to help them out.'

Any sort of carbon tax, cap-and-trade or carbon pricing is likely to raise the price of commodities consumed by low-income people - an undesirable effect that lawmakers are aware of, Fullerton said.

Although the cap-and-trade bill that passed the House is now dead, lawmakers wrote the bill with an eye toward helping low-income households purchase electricity.

'I think policymakers in general recognise that it's going to have regressive effects when the prices of electricity, gasoline and heating fuel go up, because these goods make up a big fraction of low-income budgets,' said Fullerton, an expert on the economic impact of environmental regulations. 'That's why these types of tax rebate proposals are floated, to make a pollution tax or a carbon tax more politically viable.'

According to the research, even though the pollution tax injures both high- and low-skilled labour through higher prices of goods and services, the wage rates for low-skilled labour also declines. In almost all of the study's economic models, the rebate of all revenue to low-skilled labour still does not prevent a reduction in their overall real net wages.

'If a firm is going to reduce its carbon emissions, it might do more of something else,' Fullerton said. 'In order to cut emissions, they might need more high-tech abatement capital and labour, and that means buying more high-skill labour. That drives up the high-skill wage, which is going to help high-wage earners but hurt lower income people through another mechanism. So the effects of pollution taxes are felt not only on the 'uses' side of income in the form of higher product prices, but also on the 'sources' side of income with declining relative wage rates for low skilled workers.'

But just because the poor would bear a burden of a carbon tax doesn't mean it's not worth doing in some form or another, said Fullerton, who heads the environmental and energy economics program for the National Bureau of Economic Research, a nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank that provides economic analysis for government, business and the academic community.

'The take-home message is that there's no such thing as a free lunch,' he said. 'Everyone is going to bear some costs of carbon pricing, but the point of it is to avoid the even greater costs of global warming and climate change.

'Nobody wants to bear these costs, but the alternatives are much worse - more carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases, more climate change, global warming, and more extreme weather events. All of these bad outcomes disproportionally hurt the poor.'

Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


Leave a comment
The details you provide on this page [e-mail address] will not be used to send unsolicited e-mail, and will not be supplied to a third party! Please note that we can not promise to give everyone a response. Comments are fully moderated. Once approved they will be posted within 24 hours.
Expand the form to leave a comment

RSS FEEDS, NEWSLETTER
Find the topic you want. Science Centric offers several RSS feeds for the News section.

Or subscribe for our Newsletter, a free e-mail publication. It is published practically every day.

The key to quieter Atlantic hurricane seasons may be blowing in the windThe key to quieter Atlantic hurricane seasons may be blowing in the wind

— Every year, storms over West Africa disturb millions of tons of dust and strong winds carry those particles into the skies over the Atlantic. According to a recent…

Hareless: Yellowstone's rabbits have vanishedHareless: Yellowstone's rabbits have vanished

— A new study by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society found that jack rabbits living in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem have apparently hopped into…

Fishermen and UCSB scientists explore ways to improve management of California spiny lobstersFishermen and UCSB scientists explore ways to improve management of California spiny lobsters

— Unique, collaborative ways to manage fisheries are emerging in Southern California. Currently the California spiny lobster is being scrutinised as Californians evaluate…

AAHL reduces environmental footprintAAHL reduces environmental footprint

— A series of equipment upgrades undertaken over the past five years at CSIRO Livestock Industries' Australian Animal Health Laboratory (AAHL) in Geelong has resulted…

Popular tags in Environment: climate · ecosystem · nitrogen · pollution