Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support

Contrary to what is still often believed, the climate and trade communities have a lot in common: a common problem (a global "public good"), common foes (vested interests using protection for slowing down climate change policies), and com...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Messerlin, Patrick A.
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
CO2
PP
SO2
Online Access:http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20100726084354
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3862
id okr-10986-3862
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ALLOCATION
ALUMINUM
ANNUAL EMISSIONS
AUCTIONS
BANKING SECTOR
BENEFICIARIES
BOILERS
BUSINESS PRACTICES
CAPS
CARBON
CARBON ALLOWANCES
CARBON CONTENT
CARBON EMISSIONS
CARBON FOOTPRINT
CARBON LEAKAGE
CARBON MARKET
CARBON POLICIES
CARBON PRICES
CARBON TAX
CARBON TAXES
CARBON TRADING
CHEMICALS
CLEANER TECHNOLOGIES
CLIMATE
CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE CHANGE EFFORTS
CLIMATE CHANGE POLICIES
CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY
CLIMATE POLICY
CLOSED ECONOMY
CO2
COAL
COAL MINING
COATINGS
COKE OVEN
COMMON MARKET
CONVERGENCE
COPPER
CUTTING EMISSIONS
DAMAGES
DETERGENTS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
DOMESTIC CARBON
DURABLE
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC WELFARE
ELECTRICITY
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMISSION
EMISSION CUTS
EMISSIONS CUTS
EMISSIONS TRADING
ENERGY POLICY
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
EQUIPMENT
EQUIPMENTS
EXPORT PROCESSING ZONES
EXPORTER
EXPORTERS
FATS
FERROUS METALS
FISCAL POLICIES
FISCAL POLICY
FOREIGN FIRMS
FORESTRY
FRAUD
FRAUDS
FREE ALLOWANCES
FREE TRADE
FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
GAS EXTRACTION
GLOBAL CLIMATE
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS
GLOBAL MARKETS
GLOBAL TRADE
GLOBAL WARMING
GREENHOUSE
GREENHOUSE GAS
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
GREENHOUSE GASES
HARMONIZATION
IMPORTS
INCOME
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME TAX
INDIVIDUAL FIRMS
INSTRUMENT
INSURANCE
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW
INVESTING
IRON
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
LEVIES
LEVY
LIBERALIZATION
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
MANGANESE
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET SHARE
NATURAL GAS
NEGATIVE IMPACT
NICKEL
OIL PRICE
OILS
OUTPUT
OUTPUTS
OUTSOURCING
PAINTS
PESTICIDES
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
PHARMACEUTICALS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POLLUTERS
POTASSIUM
PP
PRECAUTIONARY APPROACH
PRICE BAND
PRICE INCREASE
PRICE SIGNAL
REBATES
REGIONAL TRADE
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RISKS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
SMALL COUNTRIES
SO2
SULFUR
SULFUR DIOXIDE
TAX POLICIES
TAX RATE
TAX RATES
TAX REGIME
TAX REGIMES
TAX SYSTEM
TEMPERATURE
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE PROTECTION
TRADE REGIME
TRADE REGIMES
TRADING PARTNERS
TRADING SYSTEM
TRANSACTION
TRANSACTION COSTS
TREATIES
TREATY
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES
URANIUM
VALUATION
WORLD ECONOMIES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD TRADE
ZINC
spellingShingle ALLOCATION
ALUMINUM
ANNUAL EMISSIONS
AUCTIONS
BANKING SECTOR
BENEFICIARIES
BOILERS
BUSINESS PRACTICES
CAPS
CARBON
CARBON ALLOWANCES
CARBON CONTENT
CARBON EMISSIONS
CARBON FOOTPRINT
CARBON LEAKAGE
CARBON MARKET
CARBON POLICIES
CARBON PRICES
CARBON TAX
CARBON TAXES
CARBON TRADING
CHEMICALS
CLEANER TECHNOLOGIES
CLIMATE
CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE CHANGE EFFORTS
CLIMATE CHANGE POLICIES
CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY
CLIMATE POLICY
CLOSED ECONOMY
CO2
COAL
COAL MINING
COATINGS
COKE OVEN
COMMON MARKET
CONVERGENCE
COPPER
CUTTING EMISSIONS
DAMAGES
DETERGENTS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
DOMESTIC CARBON
DURABLE
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC WELFARE
ELECTRICITY
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMISSION
EMISSION CUTS
EMISSIONS CUTS
EMISSIONS TRADING
ENERGY POLICY
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
EQUIPMENT
EQUIPMENTS
EXPORT PROCESSING ZONES
EXPORTER
EXPORTERS
FATS
FERROUS METALS
FISCAL POLICIES
FISCAL POLICY
FOREIGN FIRMS
FORESTRY
FRAUD
FRAUDS
FREE ALLOWANCES
FREE TRADE
FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS
GAS EXTRACTION
GLOBAL CLIMATE
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS
GLOBAL MARKETS
GLOBAL TRADE
GLOBAL WARMING
GREENHOUSE
GREENHOUSE GAS
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS
GREENHOUSE GASES
HARMONIZATION
IMPORTS
INCOME
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME TAX
INDIVIDUAL FIRMS
INSTRUMENT
INSURANCE
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW
INVESTING
IRON
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
LEVIES
LEVY
LIBERALIZATION
LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE
MANGANESE
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET SHARE
NATURAL GAS
NEGATIVE IMPACT
NICKEL
OIL PRICE
OILS
OUTPUT
OUTPUTS
OUTSOURCING
PAINTS
PESTICIDES
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
PHARMACEUTICALS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POLLUTERS
POTASSIUM
PP
PRECAUTIONARY APPROACH
PRICE BAND
PRICE INCREASE
PRICE SIGNAL
REBATES
REGIONAL TRADE
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RISKS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
SMALL COUNTRIES
SO2
SULFUR
SULFUR DIOXIDE
TAX POLICIES
TAX RATE
TAX RATES
TAX REGIME
TAX REGIMES
TAX SYSTEM
TEMPERATURE
TRADE LIBERALIZATION
TRADE PROTECTION
TRADE REGIME
TRADE REGIMES
TRADING PARTNERS
TRADING SYSTEM
TRANSACTION
TRANSACTION COSTS
TREATIES
TREATY
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES
URANIUM
VALUATION
WORLD ECONOMIES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD TRADE
ZINC
Messerlin, Patrick A.
Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support
geographic_facet The World Region
The World Region
relation Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 5378
description Contrary to what is still often believed, the climate and trade communities have a lot in common: a common problem (a global "public good"), common foes (vested interests using protection for slowing down climate change policies), and common friends (firms delivering goods, services, and equipment that are both cleaner and cheaper). They have thus many reasons to buttress each other. The climate community would enormously benefit from adopting the principle of "national treatment," which would legitimize and discipline the use of carbon border tax adjustment and the principle of "most-favored nation," which would ban carbon tariffs. The main effect of this would be to fuel a dual world economy of clean countries trading between themselves and dirty countries trading between themselves at a great cost for climate change. And the trade community would enormously benefit from a climate community capable of designing instruments that would support the adjustment efforts to be made by carbon-intensive firms much better than instruments such as antidumping or safeguards, which have proved to be ineffective and perverse. That said, implementing these principles will be difficult. The paper focuses on two key problems. First, the way carbon border taxes are defined has a huge impact on the joint outcome from climate change, trade, and development perspectives. Second, the multilateral climate change regime could easily become too complex to be manageable. Focusing on carbon-intensive sectors and building "clusters" of production processes considered as having "like carbon-intensity" are the two main ways for keeping the regime manageable. Developing them in a multilateral framework would make them more transparent and unbiased.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Messerlin, Patrick A.
author_facet Messerlin, Patrick A.
author_sort Messerlin, Patrick A.
title Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support
title_short Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support
title_full Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support
title_fullStr Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support
title_full_unstemmed Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support
title_sort climate change and trade policy : from mutual destruction to mutual support
publishDate 2012
url http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20100726084354
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3862
_version_ 1764388723139543040
spelling okr-10986-38622021-04-23T14:02:13Z Climate Change and Trade Policy : From Mutual Destruction to Mutual Support Messerlin, Patrick A. ALLOCATION ALUMINUM ANNUAL EMISSIONS AUCTIONS BANKING SECTOR BENEFICIARIES BOILERS BUSINESS PRACTICES CAPS CARBON CARBON ALLOWANCES CARBON CONTENT CARBON EMISSIONS CARBON FOOTPRINT CARBON LEAKAGE CARBON MARKET CARBON POLICIES CARBON PRICES CARBON TAX CARBON TAXES CARBON TRADING CHEMICALS CLEANER TECHNOLOGIES CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE EFFORTS CLIMATE CHANGE POLICIES CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY CLIMATE POLICY CLOSED ECONOMY CO2 COAL COAL MINING COATINGS COKE OVEN COMMON MARKET CONVERGENCE COPPER CUTTING EMISSIONS DAMAGES DETERGENTS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPING ECONOMIES DOMESTIC CARBON DURABLE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ECONOMIC WELFARE ELECTRICITY EMERGING ECONOMIES EMISSION EMISSION CUTS EMISSIONS CUTS EMISSIONS TRADING ENERGY POLICY ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY EQUIPMENT EQUIPMENTS EXPORT PROCESSING ZONES EXPORTER EXPORTERS FATS FERROUS METALS FISCAL POLICIES FISCAL POLICY FOREIGN FIRMS FORESTRY FRAUD FRAUDS FREE ALLOWANCES FREE TRADE FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS GAS EXTRACTION GLOBAL CLIMATE GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE GLOBAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS GLOBAL MARKETS GLOBAL TRADE GLOBAL WARMING GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GREENHOUSE GASES HARMONIZATION IMPORTS INCOME INCOME LEVEL INCOME TAX INDIVIDUAL FIRMS INSTRUMENT INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW INVESTING IRON LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEVEL PLAYING FIELD LEVIES LEVY LIBERALIZATION LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE MANGANESE MARKET ACCESS MARKET SHARE NATURAL GAS NEGATIVE IMPACT NICKEL OIL PRICE OILS OUTPUT OUTPUTS OUTSOURCING PAINTS PESTICIDES PETROLEUM PRODUCTS PHARMACEUTICALS POLITICAL ECONOMY POLLUTERS POTASSIUM PP PRECAUTIONARY APPROACH PRICE BAND PRICE INCREASE PRICE SIGNAL REBATES REGIONAL TRADE RENEWABLE ENERGY RISKS OF CLIMATE CHANGE SMALL COUNTRIES SO2 SULFUR SULFUR DIOXIDE TAX POLICIES TAX RATE TAX RATES TAX REGIME TAX REGIMES TAX SYSTEM TEMPERATURE TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE PROTECTION TRADE REGIME TRADE REGIMES TRADING PARTNERS TRADING SYSTEM TRANSACTION TRANSACTION COSTS TREATIES TREATY UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES URANIUM VALUATION WORLD ECONOMIES WORLD ECONOMY WORLD TRADE ZINC Contrary to what is still often believed, the climate and trade communities have a lot in common: a common problem (a global "public good"), common foes (vested interests using protection for slowing down climate change policies), and common friends (firms delivering goods, services, and equipment that are both cleaner and cheaper). They have thus many reasons to buttress each other. The climate community would enormously benefit from adopting the principle of "national treatment," which would legitimize and discipline the use of carbon border tax adjustment and the principle of "most-favored nation," which would ban carbon tariffs. The main effect of this would be to fuel a dual world economy of clean countries trading between themselves and dirty countries trading between themselves at a great cost for climate change. And the trade community would enormously benefit from a climate community capable of designing instruments that would support the adjustment efforts to be made by carbon-intensive firms much better than instruments such as antidumping or safeguards, which have proved to be ineffective and perverse. That said, implementing these principles will be difficult. The paper focuses on two key problems. First, the way carbon border taxes are defined has a huge impact on the joint outcome from climate change, trade, and development perspectives. Second, the multilateral climate change regime could easily become too complex to be manageable. Focusing on carbon-intensive sectors and building "clusters" of production processes considered as having "like carbon-intensity" are the two main ways for keeping the regime manageable. Developing them in a multilateral framework would make them more transparent and unbiased. 2012-03-19T18:41:08Z 2012-03-19T18:41:08Z 2010-07-01 http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20100726084354 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3862 English Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 5378 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper The World Region The World Region