Optimal Climate Policy with Incomplete Markets

Spatial, International and Macroeconomics Seminar
Campus from above with Mandeville Building

How should governments design climate policies in the presence of inequality, uninsurable risk, and fiscal constraints? To address this question, we develop a climate--economy model with incomplete markets and idiosyncratic labor-income risk, where Ricardian equivalence fails and optimal long-run capital taxes are positive.

Speaker
Thomas Douenne
Date
Tuesday 16 Jun 2026, 14:00 - 15:00
Type
Seminar
Room
M1-16 (Heidelberg)
Building
Mandeville Building
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We analytically show that the optimal carbon tax equals the social cost of carbon (SCC) adjusted for fiscal distortions. We calibrate the model to the U.S. and show that deviations from the SCC are quantitatively negligible: the optimal tax remains nearly Pigouvian across scenarios, even under tight fiscal constraints. Welfare gains under the optimal policy come almost entirely from efficiency and environmental amenities, with almost no effect on redistribution and insurance, and are fairly evenly distributed across households.

Registration for bilateral, lunch or dinner

Lunch will be provided. If you would like to meet the guest speaker for a bilateral, join for lunch or dinner, then please register by filling in the registration form.

See also

The Misallocation of Ethical Workers

Robert Dur (Erasmus School of Economics)
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Policy Afternoon 'Tackling Place-Based Inequalities'

With presentations by Matthijs Korevaar, Sara Signorelli and Elisabeth Leduc.

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