Title of article :
Avoiding adverse employment effects from electricity taxation in Norway: What does it cost?
Author/Authors :
Geir H. Bjertn?s، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
8
From page :
4766
To page :
4773
Abstract :
Welfare analyses of energy taxes typically show that systems with uniform rates perform better than differentiated systems. However, most western countries include some exemptions for their energy-intensive export industries and thereby avoid this potential welfare gain. Böhringer and Rutherford (1997) find that uniform taxation of carbon emissions in combination with a wage subsidy preserves jobs in these industries at a lower welfare cost compared with a differentiated system. The wage subsidy scheme generates a substantial welfare gain per job saved. This study, however, finds that welfare costs are substantial when less accurate policy measures, represented by production-dependent subsidies, protect jobs in Norwegian electricity-intensive industries. The welfare cost per job preserved by this subsidy scheme amounts to approximately 60% of the wage cost per job, suggesting that these jobs are expensive to preserve. A uniform electricity tax combined with production-dependent subsidies preserves jobs at a lower welfare cost compared with the current differentiated electricity tax system.
Keywords :
Energy taxes , Political feasibility , CGE models
Journal title :
Energy Policy
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Energy Policy
Record number :
973206
Link To Document :
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