Carbon pricing is key to delivering global emissions cuts, IMF says
Higher temperatures and more intense storms haven’t changed the fundamental challenge of climate policy: Countries around the world must find politically feasible ways to zero out emissions without taking on crushing loads of debt.
The latest edition of the International Monetary Fund’s semiannual Fiscal Monitor calls that quandary a “trilemma.” It can be solved, the authors argue, through targeted policies anchored in some version of carbon pricing, traditionally economists’ preferred tool. The report comes in advance of the IMF’s annual meeting, to be held this month in Marrakech, Morocco.
The IMF analyzes two scenarios in which countries act to cut greenhouse gases. Each scenario simulates two hypothetical countries: one an average of the G-7 economies, the other an average of Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa and Turkey.
In one scenario, governments take emissions-slashing measures that balloon their debt. The massive pulse in climate-related spending pushes the debt-to-gross-domestic-product ratio of the hypothetical advanced economy up 45% by 2050, with similar effects on borrowing costs. In the hypothetical emerging or developing economy, debt-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio jumps 50%.
In the second scenario, more modest policy measures fail to cut the rich country’s emissions nearly enough — just 40% below the current level. In the hypothetical developing country, emissions fall only 10%.
In short, paying for the energy transition can’t be shouldered by governments or the private sector alone. “We consider this as fiscally unsustainable” for governments, said Ruud de Mooij, deputy director of the IMF’s Fiscal Affairs Department, who ran the study. “On the other hand, if the government lets the private sector pay for everything, this may produce fierce political opposition,” De Mooij said, which could undermine climate action.
There is a productive medium between the two, according to the IMF. Carbon pricing, coupled with moderate spending, lowers the debt burden in the scenarios for both developed and emerging economies.
If advanced economies can pass both carbon pricing and policies specific to hard-to-decarbonise sectors, such as buildings and steelmaking, their debt load would increase by 10% to 15% of GDP in the simulation — not great, but much more manageable than unrestricted climate investment.
Emerging markets might also see a 15% increase in debt. Developing countries and emerging markets together are expected to be responsible for more than 70% of emissions by 2035, yet face massive debt and rising interest rates, putting them at a disadvantage to their richer neighbors. Investment in low-carbon energy in these nations is far behind the renewable transformation of advanced economies and China.
The course that IMF analysts chart through the climate strait is a plausible one. Carbon pricing policies, such as a tax or permit-trading market, are in place in 49 developed or emerging-market countries. Another 23 are planning them. The prices range from a high of $130 a ton of CO2 in Liechtenstein to a low of about $5 in Argentina. In China’s national trading program, a ton of carbon dioxide is currently worth $10.40. The world average is $20 a ton, and the policies cover about 25% of global emissions.
Economists and other advocates once considered carbon pricing as close to a magic bullet as policy tools get. That’s because, theoretically, it corrects the central driver of climate change — fossil fuel emissions historically have a cost, but no price — and generates revenue that can then be used to help people and industries through the transition to clean energy.
Enough carbon pricing mechanisms are in place around the world for the researchers to be able to use data to see how well they do in comparison to simulations. The oldest carbon pricing programs have been around for years. Sweden first enacted a carbon price in 1991.
Carbon pricing hasn’t proved politically feasible everywhere. Australia adopted a carbon price in 2011 and repealed it three years later. A US push in 2009 for national carbon pricing failed; the US has since relied on subsidies, regulation and, most recently, the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, a broad incentives package.
The approach also has limited value when it comes to sectors lagging in decarbonisation. Building owners need more specific incentives to retrofit their systems with heat pumps. For these and other parts of the economy, the IMF recommends any of a suite of tools. These may include plain-old regulation and subsidies, as well as “feebates” that levy a fee for carbon-heavy technologies, such as internal-combustion cars, or rebate purchase costs for electric vehicles.
Fossil-fuel producing countries are in a particularly sensitive condition, as they must wind down their main export, shift to clean energy and do so at the whims of a global fossil-fuel energy market in decline. There are ten countries that bring in more than half their revenue from fossil fuel sales. New fiscal approaches and diversification of national oil companies are critical, the IMF writes.
The climate trilemma is particularly acute in emerging markets and developing countries, the subject of an accompanying IMF release, the Global Financial Stability Report.
These nations collectively need about $2-trillion in energy-transition investment a year by 2030, up from a current level of about $400-billion. Sub-investment grade credit and high finance costs for governments mean that the private sector will need to deliver 80% of the investment — 90% if China isn’t included.
Banks and insurers play a key role in how poorer countries develop. Coal plants financed by banks with stricter climate policies “are more likely to be retired or repurposed,” the authors write.
Sitting still as the climate changes is also an expensive option. Doing nothing adds 0.8% to 2% of GDP a year to public debt, as losses and adaptation costs mount. Ratios of debt to GDP are already expected to rise by one percentage point a year through 2028.
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