Distributional impact of carbon pricing in Chinese provinces

Qian Wang, Klaus Hubacek, Kuishuang Feng*, Lin Guo, Kun Zhang, Jinjun Xue, Qiao Mei Liang

*Corresponding author for this work

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    Abstract

    Based on a Multi-Regional Input-Output (MRIO)model, and combined with the 2012 MRIO table for 30 Chinese provinces, this paper analyzes the distributional impacts of carbon pricing on households within and across Chinese provinces. The results show regressive distributional effects of carbon pricing across provinces, i.e. poor provinces are affected more by the price. Carbon pricing also shows rural-urban regressivity (i.e. rural households are impacted more heavily than urban households)in more than half of the provinces. Within each selected province, carbon pricing has mostly regressive effects, i.e. poorer urban households are more affected than richer urban households in all provinces and poorer rural households more than richer rural households in one third of the provinces. When looking more specifically at direct energy consumption, we find that the carbon pricing on domestic fuels generally shows regressivity, while pricing carbon on transport fuels shows progressivity. In addition, the impact of carbon pricing on residential direct expenditures (mainly on electricity and coal)is the most important contributor to the regional regressivity across provinces.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)327-340
    Number of pages14
    JournalEnergy Economics
    Volume81
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jun 2019

    Keywords

    • Carbon pricing
    • Carbon tax
    • Climate change
    • Income distribution
    • Inequality
    • Input-output analysis

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    Wang, Q., Hubacek, K., Feng, K., Guo, L., Zhang, K., Xue, J., & Liang, Q. M. (2019). Distributional impact of carbon pricing in Chinese provinces. Energy Economics, 81, 327-340. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eneco.2019.04.003