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Taxation of a Polluting Non-renewable Resource in the Heterogeneous World

Authors
  • Daubanes, Julien1
  • Grimaud, André2
  • 1 Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zürich, CER-ETH at ETHZ, ZUE F12, Zürichbergstrasse 18, Zürich, 8092, Switzerland , Zürich (Switzerland)
  • 2 Toulouse School of Economics, and ESCT, Toulouse Business School, IDEI and LERNA at TSE, Toulouse, France , Toulouse (France)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Environmental and Resource Economics
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Publication Date
Aug 01, 2010
Volume
47
Issue
4
Pages
567–588
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1007/s10640-010-9393-2
Source
Springer Nature
Keywords
License
Yellow

Abstract

This paper extends the literature on the taxation of polluting exhaustible resources by taking international heterogeneities and national tax-setting into account. We propose a two-country Romer model of endogenous growth in which the South is endowed with the stock of an essential polluting non-renewable resource and world economic growth is driven by a northern research sector. We consider the stock of pollution as affecting global welfare. First, we characterize the optimal environmental taxation policies. Second, we examine the impacts of national taxes. Their time profile determines the extraction path, the dynamics of pollution accumulation and that of world output. Their respective levels entail inter-country interactions by altering the efficiency of the world resource allocation, the tax revenues and the resource rents. We study isolatedly the distortional and distributional effects of local taxes. Then, we completely assess the overall impact of a unilateral tax increase. Finally, we find that, even if heterogeneous countries coordinate their taxation policies to correct the global environmental problem, their divergent strategic interests cause another global, non-environmental distortion in the allocation of the resource.

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