Weighing Externalities of Economic Recovery Projects: An Alternative to Green Taxonomies that is Fairer and more Realistic

R. Bardy, A. Rubens
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

Abstract Natural and man-made crises and disasters often cause untold destruction, but also provide multiple opportunities for economic redevelopment post the crisis. Like other crises the COVID-19 pandemic has spurred public and private entities to become engaged in significant redevelopment efforts. Policymakers in some countries view these efforts as an opening for not only including other issues such as deficits in infrastructure and the social systems, but also for redefining their political priorities towards a “green economy”. While pursuing various policy objectives at the same time is a prudent undertaking, it seems rather questionable that politicians, under the pressure of ecological activism, would evaluate all crisis policy measures by their effect on environmental outcomes. We are seeing this in the European Union (EU) as it is about to couple its Recovery and Resilience Facility (financed through the “Next Generation EU Recovery Fund”) with its Green Deal. In the U.S., so far, the Build Back Better package and the American Rescue Plan seem to seek separate evaluation schemes for their different policy fields. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the wide-ranging opinions that exist on the intention to make recovery support contingent on ecological effects: For example, there is the classic Tinbergen Rule which states that for each policy target there must be at least one policy tool; thus, if there are fewer tools than targets, then some policy goals will not ultimately be achieved. Likewise, long-term climate change mitigation can only be achieved with long-term policies that consider and weigh out all externalities. Moreover, embarking on long term recovery plans cannot solely be formulated and implemented on ex-ante definitions of ecological impacts. The paper raises the question whether requesting ecological effects from all recovery programs is just and fair. It contrasts the various options of coupling recovery efforts and climate mitigation with state-of-the-art approaches of valuating multiple externalities: weighing the diverse externalities of policy projects can determine which policy tools to choose. It also demonstrates the downside of a policy that are solely focuses on granting financial support, if not, a project can effectively meet a pre-specified ecological and energy goal as set up by the EU and which ranks recovery projects according to their arbitrary effect on climate change. A wider scope of decision criteria will produce more effective ways to “build back better”.
权衡经济复苏项目的外部性:绿色分类法的一种更公平、更现实的替代方法
自然和人为的危机和灾害往往造成难以估量的破坏,但也为危机后的经济重建提供了多种机会。与其他危机一样,2019冠状病毒病大流行促使公共和私营实体参与重大的重建工作。一些国家的政策制定者认为,这些努力不仅是解决基础设施和社会系统赤字等其他问题的契机,也是重新确定其政治优先事项以实现“绿色经济”的契机。虽然同时追求各种政策目标是一项谨慎的事业,但在生态行动主义的压力下,政治家们是否会根据对环境结果的影响来评估所有危机政策措施,似乎相当值得怀疑。我们在欧盟(EU)看到了这一点,因为它即将将其复苏和弹性基金(由“下一代欧盟复苏基金”资助)与绿色协议结合起来。到目前为止,美国的“重建更好”计划和“美国救助计划”似乎在各自的政策领域寻求不同的评价方案。本文的目的是评估存在的关于将恢复支持取决于生态效应的意图的广泛意见:例如,有经典的丁伯根规则,该规则规定,对于每个政策目标,必须至少有一个政策工具;因此,如果工具少于目标,那么一些政策目标最终将无法实现。同样,只有考虑和权衡所有外部性的长期政策才能实现长期减缓气候变化。此外,不能仅仅根据事先对生态影响的定义来制定和执行长期恢复计划。这篇论文提出了这样一个问题:从所有的恢复计划中要求生态效应是否公正和公平?它对比了将恢复努力和减缓气候变化结合起来的各种选择与评估多种外部性的最先进方法:权衡政策项目的各种外部性可以决定选择哪种政策工具。这也表明了一项只注重提供财政支持的政策的缺点,如果没有,一个项目可以有效地达到欧盟设定的预先规定的生态和能源目标,并根据其对气候变化的任意影响对恢复项目进行排名。更广泛的决策标准将产生更有效的方法来“更好地重建”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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