With a Little Help from My Friends: Debt Renegotiation and Climate Change

Juan-Camilo Cardenas, Fernando Jaramillo, D. León, María del Pilar López-Uribe, M. Rodríguez, Hernando Zuleta
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Abstract

The economic crisis from the Covid-19 pandemic has generated a fall in tax revenues and an increase in the need for public spending in most economies throughout the world. This situation has led to a substantial increase in the sovereign debt levels and has dramatically reduced the fiscal space of governments. For upper- middle-income countries (UMICs), current access to financing is limited and this can potentially limit the space for climate action in the short and medium run. However, delaying climate action can generate a negative signal on fiscal sustainability due to the physical and transition risks of climate change. Unsustainable production practices will result in a deterioration of the productive capacity of natural assets reducing potential tax income. Simultaneously there will be a stronger need for public spending to face the future damages associated to greenhouse gases emissions. Therefore, in order to address the current crisis, we need an integral approach that considers the climate crisis as a challenge with a high degree of urgency. For this approach to be feasible, sufficient international climate finance needs to be available, and it should help to steer relief and recovery efforts into a direction in which these are also compatible with climate targets. In this document, we propose a sovereign debt negotiation scheme in which the conditions of the debt depend on the climate policies undertaken by the debtor countries. Likewise, we point out that the feasibility of beneficial agreements for debtors and the implementation of good climate policies depend positively on the size of the debt and each country's potential to affect the current trend of climate change. For these reasons, the formation of coalitions of debtor countries can be a key factor for debt relief and the implementation of climate policies.
在我朋友的一点帮助下:债务重新谈判和气候变化
新冠肺炎大流行引发的经济危机导致全球大多数经济体的税收收入下降,公共支出需求增加。这种情况导致主权债务水平大幅上升,并大大减少了政府的财政空间。对于中高收入国家(UMICs)来说,目前获得融资的机会有限,这可能会限制短期和中期气候行动的空间。然而,由于气候变化的物理和转型风险,推迟气候行动可能会对财政可持续性产生负面信号。不可持续的生产做法将导致自然资产生产能力的恶化,从而减少潜在的税收收入。与此同时,更需要公共支出来应对与温室气体排放有关的未来损害。因此,为了解决当前的危机,我们需要一个综合的方法,将气候危机视为一个高度紧迫的挑战。要使这种方法可行,就需要有足够的国际气候资金,并应有助于将救援和恢复工作引导到与气候目标相一致的方向。在本文件中,我们提出了一个主权债务谈判方案,其中债务条件取决于债务国所采取的气候政策。同样,我们指出,对债务国有利的协议的可行性和良好气候政策的实施积极取决于债务规模和每个国家影响当前气候变化趋势的潜力。由于这些原因,债务国联盟的形成可以成为债务减免和执行气候政策的关键因素。
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