Research by Prof Philip Adams, Janine Dixon and Prof Peter Dixon shows that the carbon tax will have virtually no negative impact on Australia’s economic growth.
CUTTING greenhouse gas emissions is like buying an insurance policy: we incur a cost to reduce a risk. Every year Australians spend millions on insuring homes, cars and their health, not because they know that something will happen to them, but because of the risk that it might. Households make the decision that insurance premiums are worth paying. As a nation, what premium do we pay for insurance against catastrophic climate change?
Modelling by the Australian Treasury supported by the Centre of Policy Studies (CoPS), shows that to cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to 80% below 2000 levels in 2050, the Australian economy would be 2.8% smaller than it otherwise would have been. How do we interpret this?
Without the carbon tax, Australia’s GDP per head was set to grow at an average of 1.4% until 2050. With the tax in place, growth would average just over 1.3%. The implication is that the level of GDP we would have reached on 1 January 2050 will not be reached until 1 January 2052. In other words, the 2.8% reduction in GDP is equivalent to two years worth of economic growth. Phased-in over 40 years, this is less than 0.1 percentage point shaved off annual growth.
Is 2.8% a reasonable estimate? The main GHG emitting activities are fossil fuel-based electricity generation and the use of motor fuels. In Australia these activities account for around 5% of GDP. Advice from scientists and engineers suggests that the adoption of current alternatives to fossil-fuel-based technologies would approximately double the cost of electricity and motor fuels.
On this basis, if we were to replace 80% of our usage of fossil fuels with alternative energy, it would cost around 4% of GDP. But 4% is a pessimistic estimate for two reasons.
Firstly it is based on the comparison of current costs. If the world embraced the need for deep cuts in GHG emissions, we would expect rapid technical progress in low-emission technologies, reducing their cost.
The second reason is that we would not replace the whole 80% of GHG emitting activities with the more costly alternative energies; we would also reduce overall energy usage.
The aggregate cost seems bearable. But what about the distribution of the cost?
Low-income households are squeezed from both sides. Electricity and fuel are necessities and typically account for a greater proportion of the household budget in low-income households. On top of this, low-income households may not be able to absorb extra costs easily. Regional impacts also have the potential to be uneven. Areas such as the Latrobe Valley in Victoria have an over-representation of emissions-intensive activities.
This is where the recycling of the carbon tax revenue is important. Tax revenues are earmarked for assistance to the so-called emission-intensive, trade-exposed industries and for household assistance. Household assistance takes the form of direct payments (the Clean Energy Supplement for low and middle-income households) and a significant increase in the tax-free threshold to over $18,000. This redistributes the burden of the carbon tax away from those who can afford it least.
Is the carbon tax really about getting people to switch off the beer fridge and get rid of the second car? The elasticities of demand for electricity and motor fuels are typically low, suggesting that to a large extent Australians will cover the price increase by reducing other consumption instead. So it is not the reduction in electricity usage so much as the substitution to alternative forms of electricity generation that will be the real achievement of the carbon tax. Lifting the price of cheap and dirty brown coal electricity generation opens the door for the more expensive, greener options: carbon capture, wind, geothermal and solar.
Many questions remain. Have we chosen a reasonable target? The interim 5% cut by 2020 target has been derided as unambitious. But as householders nervously await their next electricity bills, many will be satisfied that enough is being done. What is the cost of unabated climate change? Should Australia even bother, when our efforts are so small on a global scale?
The message from the economic modelling is that the current target is achievable at modest cost, and that distributional impacts need not be significant if a well-managed program of compensation is implemented.
(This research was funded by a number of Public and Private organisations, including the Federal Treasury and the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency. Peter Dixon and Philip Adams do not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article. They also have no relevant affiliations. This article was originally published at The Conversation. Read the original article.)







7 Comments
New research shows the #CarbonTax won't harm Australia's #economic growth. #AGW http://t.co/WXZqqKad
Well, what about it Alan Jones, Andrew Bolt, Tony Abbott, and all you other ‘experts’.
I heard someone on the BBC the other day suggesting that part of the problem with getting action on climate change is that so few MPs have a science background. Does anyone know how many science degrees there are among our MPs? I couldn’t find it on the internet. Come to think of it, a list of all of them with their educational qualifications and employment history would be worth having.
There’s nothing to fear from this tax as you call it.
It will make the polluters think and improve their business buying Solar for a start.
Many homes have installed Solar thanks to our wonderful PM Julia Gillard and her Govt with schemes to assist.
For those who can not afford this buy Green Power it’s a lousy $1 a week with big discounts.
Also buy Green Gas for another $1 a week with great discounts.
I have already saved from my winter bill buying Green Gas.
Stop the moaning change you lights in the home do all the things you can and you will save.
I did.
No no that is all wrong, this Great Big New Tax will destroy our way of life, make energy totally unaffordable for people who just want to get ahead by hitting them with this socialist wealth redistribution. Oh the horror, the horror, we need an election now please! Then all with be right with the world.
As a counterpoint to my sarcastic comments about the carbon tax: we have recently completed renovations at our house to make it more comfortable and energy efficient. Apart from the cheap and easy measures such as finding and remedying drafts, we have had more insulation added to the ceiling and replaced the windows in the living areas and the master bedroom (as it faces the street) with double-glazed low E windows. Admittedly the latter were not cheap but the house feels much more cosy (and quiet)during the winter and during last summer we found that the house took a lot longer than before to warm to the extent that we felt we had to use the (evaporative) air con. Our electricity and gas bills have dropped considerably despite the price rises which have occurred. We haven’t installed solar panels but will likely do so in the next few years. Few of us are unable to make similar improvements.
One of the features of the carbon pricing package that’s often overlooked is the fostering of emerging clean-energy industries. Make no mistake, the Australian economy will be irrelevant if we miss the chance to compete in the low emissions global framework.
Shame on the Hate Media for using spin and propaganda to retard the country’s progress. The Hate Media is one “industry” that does not need encouragement.
On Yahoo Seven News it is reported that Tony Abbott visited an industrial hose company and said “they have seen their power bills go up by [Abbott emphasizing] FIFTY PER CENT, A FULL FIFTY PER CENT over the last two years.
The Channel Seven reported then added “but the Carbon Tax has only been in place for a month”.
Then back to Abbott: “And it’s only going to get worse, AND WORSE, AND WORSE under the Carbon Tax.
I am afraid, very afraid. Tonight I will be sleeping with my bedroom light on.
Cannot the ACCC take action about politicians lieing about the Carbon tax? or do they have a right to lie?
Carbon tax won’t harm economic growth http://t.co/ufQaZKBs