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GTAP Resources: Resource Display

GTAP Resource #7666

"Border tax adjustments in the climate policy context: CO2 versus broad-based GHG emission targeting"
by Ghosh, Madanmohan, Deming Luo, Muhammad Shahid Siddiqui and Yunfa Zhu


Abstract
Using a multi-region, multi-sector computable general equilibrium (CGE) model, this paper compares the efficiency,
distributional and emission leakage effects of border tax adjustments (BTAs) as part of unilateral climate
policies that are based on carbon dioxide (CO2)-only versus those based on all greenhouse gases (GHGs). Simulation
results suggest that the broad-based GHG policies in general have lower efficiency costs and result in less
re-distributive effects. BTAs bring modest efficiency gains with adverse distributional consequences. The distributional
impacts are smaller under broad-based GHG policies compared to that based on CO2 only. However,
these are due to a wider variety of abatement options under multi-gas policies rather than the BTAs per se.
The main difference between the two policies is distributional effects. First, CO2-only based policies have
worse impacts on fossil fuel exporters such as Russia and relatively better outcomes for oil importers such as
India and China, compared to that of multi-gas policies particularly when it involves large global emission reduction.
Second, sectoral coverage under BTAs also influences the differential outcomes. For example, Brazil is worse
impacted under GHG-based policies if agriculture is brought under BTAs as two-third of its emissions are
non-CO2 based and agriculture is the primary source of these emissions.


Resource Details (Export Citation) GTAP Keywords
Category: Other CGE Application
Status: Published
By/In: Energy Economics
Date: 2012
Version:
Created: Ghosh, M. (1/30/2026)
Updated: Batta, G. (1/30/2026)
Visits: 10
No keywords have been specified.


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