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"The need for a domestic U.S. policy that seriously addresses climate change is increasingly apparent. A cap-and-trade system is the best approach in the short to medium term. Besides providing certainty about emissions levels, cap-and-trade offers an easy means of compensating for the inevitably unequal burdens imposed by climate policy; it is straightforward to harmonize with other countries’ climate policies; it avoids the current political aversion in the United States to taxes; and it has a history of successful adoption in this country. The paper proposes a specific cap-and-trade system with several key features including: an upstream cap on CO2 emissions with gradual inclusion of other greenhouse gases; a gradual downward trajectory of emissions ceilings over time to minimize disruption and allow firms and households time to adapt; and mechanisms to reduce cost uncertainty. Initially, half of the program’s allowances would be allocated through auctioning and half through free distribution, primarily to those entities most burdened by the policy. This should help limit potential inequities while bolstering political support. The share distributed for free would phase out over twenty-five years. The auctioned allowances would generate revenue that could be used for a variety of worthwhile public purposes. The system would provide for linkage with international emissions reduction credit arrangements, harmonization over time with effective cap-and-trade systems in other countries, and appropriate linkage with other actions taken abroad that maintains a level playing field between imports and import-competing domestic products." |
Robert Stavins is the Albert Pratt Professor of Business and Government, director of the Harvard Environmental Economics Program, co-chair of the Harvard Business School-Kennedy School Joint Degree Program, chair of the Kennedy School's Ph.D. programs, and director of the Harvard Project on International Climate Agreements. Professor Stavins' research focuses on diverse areas of environmental economics and policy, including examinations of design and implementation of market-based policy instruments; innovation and diffusion of energy-efficiency technologies; competitiveness effects of regulation; factors affecting land use change; environmental benefit estimation; positive political economy of policy instrument choice; costs of carbon sequestration; and factors affecting urban water demand. In addition to his research at Harvard, Professor Stavins is the former chair of the Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental Economics Advisory Board, the editor of the Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, co-editor of the Journal of Wine Economics, and a member of the editorial councils of other scholarly publications. His most recent books include Public Policy for Environmental Protection and Environmental Economics. He holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Northwestern University, a master's in agricultural economics from Cornell and a PhD in economics from Harvard.
e: robert_stavins@ksg.harvard.edu |