Article(electronic)June 15, 2007

Benefits and costs to China of a climate policy

In: Environment and development economics, Volume 12, Issue 3, p. 471-497

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Abstract

In future agreements to cut greenhouse gases, a Chinese commitment will probably be essential. Committing for China is easier if the cost is low and the benefit to China is high. Using a new CGE-model of the Chinese economy we discuss the cost and benefit to China of taking on a climate commitment. We argue that a climate commitment gives significant ancillary benefits to China since associated particle and NOx-reductions improve public health and increase agricultural yields. The model of impact on agricultural yields is a novel feature of CGE-models. Comparing benefits to economic costs produces striking results. We find that China may reduce its CO2-emissions by 17.5 per cent without suffering a welfare loss. Half of the benefit originates in the novel agricultural model. We also discuss the distributional impact of a climate commitment. In general the distributional impact is not averse.

Languages

English

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

ISSN: 1469-4395

DOI

10.1017/s1355770x07003610

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