排放与产出:来自巴西的脱钩证据

J. Jalles
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:本文利用汇总数据和国家级数据,为巴西温室气体排放与实际GDP增长之间的关系提供证据。重点是将这种关系的长期趋势与短期周期性波动区分开来,并记录这些关系随时间的变化。我们使用了两种不同的滤波技术来分离趋势和周期,即常用的Hodrick-Prescott滤波器和Hamilton(2018)提出的较新的滤波器。我们发现,巴西的长期或趋势弹性约为0.8,高于发达国家的平均水平,但低于其他主要新兴市场。以消费为基础的排放的弹性略高于以生产为基础的排放。这些结果的方向与污染港假说并不完全一致,但两种弹性之间的定量差异并不大(或统计上彼此不同)。因此,我们的研究结果表明,全球生产在各国之间的分配变化并不是巴西排放增长模式变化的主要驱动因素。其他证据来自州级数据分析,人们可以观察到大量的异质性,但就脱钩而言也有一些希望。我们对27个州的分析并没有揭示任何潜在的倒u型关系,即排放强度-GDP关系与人均GDP水平之间的关系。也就是说,在州一级,我们没有观察到库兹涅茨弹性最初随着各省人均实际GDP的增加而增加,但随后下降。除了排放和产出之间的趋势关系外,我们发现巴西在总体水平上似乎不存在短期或周期性的关系(尽管随着时间的推移,这种关系变得越来越顺周期性),但在个别州确实存在这种关系。最后,我们进一步发现了周期性关系不对称的证据:繁荣时期的弹性高于萧条时期,因此,当GDP高于趋势水平时,巴西的排放量上升得更多,而当GDP低于趋势水平时,排放量下降得更多。然而,这一结果似乎主要是由少数几个州推动的。因此,向低碳经济的转型不仅需要在降低趋势排放方面取得持续进展,还需要在遏制商业周期繁荣阶段出现的排放增长方面取得持续进展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emissions and Output: Evidence of Decoupling from Brazil
ABSTRACT:This paper provides evidence on the relationship between greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and real GDP growth in Brazil, using both aggregate and state-level data. The focus is on distinguishing longer-run trends in this relationship from short-run cyclical fluctuations, and on documenting changes in these relationships over time. We use two different filtering techniques for separating trend and cycle, namely the commonly-used Hodrick-Prescott filter and the newer filter proposed by Hamilton (2018). We find that the long-run or trend elasticity for Brazil is about 0.8, higher than than in the average for advanced countries but below that of other major emerging markets. This elasticity is somewhat higher for consumption-based emissions than for production-based emissions. The direction of these results is not entirely consistent with the pollution haven hypothesis but the quantitative difference between the two elasticities is not large (or statistically different from one another). Consequently, our findings suggest that shifts in the allocation of global production across countries are not a major driver of shifts in the pattern of emissions growth in Brazil. Additional evidence comes from state-level data analysis where one can observe a great deal of heterogeneity, but also some hope as far as decoupling is concerned. Our analysis for 27 states does not reveal any underlying inverted U-shape relationship between the intensity of emissions-GDP relationship and the level of per capita GDP. That is, at the state level, we do not observe that Kuznets elasticity initially increases with provincial per capita real GDP but then declines. In addition to the trend relationship between emissions and output, we find that there does not seem to exist a short-run or cyclical relationship holding in Brazil at the aggregate level (despite having become more procyclical over time), but it does exist in a few individual states. Finally, we further find evidence of asymmetry in the cyclical relationship: the elasticity is higher in booms than during busts, and thus Brazil's emissions go up more when GDP is above trend than they decrease when GDP is below trend. However, this result seems to be mainly driven by a few states.The transition to a low-carbon economy will thus require continued progress not only in bringing down trend emissions, but also in taming the increase in emissions that occurs during the boom phase of the business cycle.
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