IMF: Long-Term, Flexible Climate Policies Can Cut Mitigation Costs

04/09/08

IMF: Long-Term, Flexible Climate Policies Can Cut Mitigation Costs

An analytic chapter in the IMF's April 2008 World Economic Outlook, entitled "Climate Change and the Global Economy," examines the macroeconomic and financial consequences of policies aimed at mitigating climate change. It finds that putting a price on emissions of greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change would have an adverse effect on productivity and economic growth. Saving and investment, capital flows, and exchange rates are also likely to be affected.

To minimize the costs of mitigation policies, it would be critical to aim at a long-term and credible policy framework that is flexible enough to adjust to emerging information and changing economic conditions. Also, the policies need to be implemented as broadly as possible, while ensuring that costs are equitably distributed across countries.

In addition, The March 2008 issue of the IMF's quarterly magazine Finance & Development tries to further the debate on the effects of climate change, warning that farm production will fall dramatically—especially in developing countries—if steps are not taken to curb carbon emissions. Other articles in the magazine on this theme argue that policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions need not hobble economies, that financial markets can help address climate change, that fiscal instruments can help countries adapt, and that the problems of climate change and sustainable development could be solved together.

By Natalia Tamirisa
IMF Research Department
April 3, 2008

The following articles are in the magazine:

Climate Change and the Economy
Natalia Tamirisa
Climate change can be addressed without either hurting macroeconomic stability and growth or putting an undue burden on the countries least able to bear the costs of policies. If policies are well designed, their economic costs should be manageable.

Global Warming and Agriculture
William R. Cline
If steps are not taken to curb carbon emissions, agricultural productivity could fall dramatically, especially in developing countries. It is therefore strongly in these countries' own interest that they participate actively in international emissions abatement programs.

Paying for Climate Change
Benjamin Jones, Michael Keen, and Jon Strand
Governments must manage the incentives for households and firms to counter and adapt to climate change. The role of fiscal instruments is central—indeed, indispensable—for both mitigating and adapting to climate change.

The Greening of Markets
Paul Mills
Recognizing how financial markets will react to climate change initiatives, and how they can best promote mitigation and adaptation, will become crucial to shaping future policy and minimizing its costs.

Rising Temperatures, Rising Risks
Mohan Munasinghe
Although climate change and sustainable development are complex, interlinked problems that pose a challenge to humanity, they could be solved together by integrating adaptation and mitigation response measures into the broader rubric of sustainable development strategies.

A webcast is also available at this site.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) www.IMF.org
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/so/2008/RES040308C.htm

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Environmental Valuation & Cost Benefit News covers legal, academic, and regulatory developments pertaining to the valuation of environmental amenities and disamenities, such as clean air, trees, parks, congestion, and noise. We apprise the reader about ways in which costs and benefits are measured, and the results of empirical studies. We hope that this information will allow public and private organizations to comprehend the risks and benefits of various actions, help disputants to resolve conflicts equitably and efficiently, and improve the quality of public policies. We will only discuss issues related to the empirical quantification of private and social costs and benefits and damages, and summarize information from daily newspapers, academic journals, legal publications, court decisions, professional newsletters commissioned studies, and on-line services. This newsletter is dedicated to the principal that all policies place values upon life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. We believe that more information, explicit specification of assumptions, and rigorous analysis can help our society to better meet these ends. This site will increasingly serve, in conjunction with others, as a valuation database. We will include a wide range of studies, including non-environmental reports, because omission of a factor effectively values it at zero, and biases decisions. Heavy traffic has caused several site crashes. We are attempting to correct these problems. Apologies for any inconvenience.

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