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Ranking the CPRS: a one-model beauty contest

By Geoff Carmody - posted Monday, 29 June 2009


(Emission) Allocations based on production are likely to result in higher welfare costs for Australia than allocations based on consumption. (Parenthesis added.)

Does this imply a consumption-based policy is lower-cost than the production-based CPRS? If so, how can the CPRS be the lowest-cost option?

In a draft report open for comment, Climate Strategies has reported climate policy modelling results for selected emissions-intensive trade-exposed industries (cement, steel, aluminium) operating in the EU.

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The modelling evaluates “carbon leakage” under six policy options for dealing with trade-exposed industries:

  1. full border adjustment (BA full) - roughly equivalent to a consumption base;
  2. BA import (border adjustment only for imports);
  3. BA direct (adjustment of exports and imports but only for direct emissions);
  4. BA EU average (adjustment for imports based on the EU emissions average);
  5. BA import direct; and
  6. full auction of permits using a production-based model.

The first five of these options are more or less comprehensive versions of the consumption-based carbon tax identified as option 4 by the Senate Select Committee. The sixth option is a particular variant of a production-based approach - a “pure” emissions trading scheme.

For cement, steel and aluminium, the first option, BA full, (closest to a consumption-based carbon tax) delivers the lowest “carbon leakage”. The sixth option (full auction of permits to producers) generates the highest “carbon leakage”.

Climate Strategies has been transparent, releasing a draft report for comment. If its modelling is correct, policy effectiveness (minimising “carbon leakage”) favours a consumption-based model (BA full) over production-based auctioning. Minimising “carbon leakage” should minimise job losses (and costs) too.

There is resonance between the Treasury statement cited above, the Climate Strategies report, and the in-principle merit of consumption-based policy because it’s trade competitiveness-neutral.

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Would Treasury modelling produce a similar finding for Australia?

Meanwhile, Nicholas Stern recently agreed with Gao Li, China’s Climate Change Department Director, who earlier this year said:

… about 15% to 25% of China’s emissions come from the products which we make for the world. … This share of emissions should be taken by the consumers, not the producers.

China’s approach delivers a consumption-based policy. Stern and China support this policy model because it’s fair. Crucially, it’s got another huge benefit. It removes loss of trade competitiveness and “carbon leakage” as a reason not to act.

A consumption-based model delivers Ross Garnaut’s desired “principled approach to the trade-exposed sector”, avoiding the morass of “special deals” and “rent-seeking” activity the CPRS has generated.

The CPRS is “the GST from hell”, delivering negative protection. Why should any country unilaterally tax its exports and effectively subsidise its imports, for no global emissions reduction?

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First published in the Australian Financial Review on June 23, 2009.



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About the Author

Geoff Carmody is Director, Geoff Carmody & Associates, a former co-founder of Access Economics, and before that was a senior officer in the Commonwealth Treasury. He favours a national consumption-based climate policy, preferably using a carbon tax to put a price on carbon. He has prepared papers entitled Effective climate change policy: the seven Cs. Paper #1: Some design principles for evaluating greenhouse gas abatement policies. Paper #2: Implementing design principles for effective climate change policy. Paper #3: ETS or carbon tax?

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Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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