A CGE framework to evaluate policy options for reducing air pollution emissions in Chile

2003 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 285-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raúl O'Ryan ◽  
Sebastian Miller ◽  
Carlos J. de Miguel

Successful economic growth in Chile based on open market and export strategy, is characterized by a high dependence on natural resources, and by polluting production and consumption patterns. There is an increasing concern about the need to make potentially significant trade-offs between economic growth and environmental improvements. Additionally, policy makers have been reluctant to impose standards that could have regressive consequences, making the poor poorer. Using the CGE model ECOGEM-Chile we study the direct and indirect effects of imposing environmental taxes in Chile for PM-10 as well as taxes on fuels. We analyze the effects over macroeconomic variables as well as sectoral, distributive, and environmental variables. The results show that the most significant impacts are on emissions and sectoral outputs. There are winners and losers. Macroeconomic and distributional impacts are low when low emission reductions are required, however they can be significant if a 50% reduction in emissions are imposed.

2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hakan Akar

Bu çalışmada, daha müreffeh bir hayat yaşama gayesiyle gerçekleştirilen sınırsız üretim ve tüketim faaliyetlerinin, çevre tahribatı yoluyla tam aksi yönde etki yapıp yapmadığı incelenmeye çalışılmıştır. Çalışmanın temel amacı, üretim ve tüketim faaliyetlerinin çevreye zarar vermesi durumunda, çevresel vergilerin bu tahribatı azaltmada etkili bir çözüm olup olamayacağı hakkında çıkarımda bulunmaktır. Çalışmanın problemi genelde çevresel bozulma, özelde de emisyondur. Öncelikle çevre ekonomisi başlığı altında çevre ile ekonomi arasındaki ilişki ortaya konulmaya çalışılmış, sonrasında analizimize hazırlık olması mahiyetinde emisyon, çevresel vergiler, GSYİH, kişi başına düşen milli gelir hakkında bilgi verilmiştir. İktisadi büyüme süreciyle çevresel bozulma arasındaki etkileşimi açıklarken Çevresel Kuznets Eğrisi (ÇKE) ve Kirlilik Sığınağı Hipotezi veya Kirlilik Cenneti’nden faydalanılmıştır. Türkiye’nin de ÇKE ile uyumlu olduğu ve milli geliri reel olarak 4090 dolardan sonra çevreye verilen zararların azalacağı tespit edilmiştir. Ayrıca milli gelir hesaplamalarında da çevresel maliyetlerin hesaba katılması zaruretine değinilmiştir. Çevresel bozulmayla çevre vergileri arasındaki ilişki de çevresel vergi gelirlerinin toplam vergi gelirlerine oranlanarak ortaya konmaya çalışılmıştır. Nitel analizlerimize temel teşkil edecek veriler Avrupa Çevre Ajansı, Avrupa Komisyonu ve Dünya Bankası’nın internet sitelerinden elde edilmiş, AB ve OECD ülkelerinin iktisadi büyüme, çevresel vergi ve emisyon hacimlerine ilişkin veriler arasındaki ilişki gözlemlenmeye çalışılmıştır. Buna göre; iktisadi büyüme, farklı gelişmişlik düzeylerine göre ülkeden ülkeye farklı çevre tahribatı sonuçları vermektedir. Çevresel vergilerin etkin bir şekilde vergi sistemlerinde bulunan ülkelerde ise, emisyon hacimlerinin daha az olması beklenmektedir. The Effect of Economic Growth and Environmental Taxes On Quantity of Emissions This study has been made to understand whether endless production and consumption activities which aim to achieve a wealthier life, cause environmental destruction. The study aims to determine, if the production and consumption activities have a negative effect on environment, whether environmental taxes would have a positive effect on environment or not. In general, the problem of this essay is environmental destruction, and in particular emissions. Initially, beneath the headline of environmental economics an effort to reveal relationship between environment and economics has been made, later on some information about the emission, environmental taxes, gross domestic product and per capita income has been given as a basis to our analysis. While explaining the interaction between economic growing process and environmental destruction; Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) and Pollution Heaven Hypothesis have been benefited. It is found out that Turkey is coherent with EKC and environmental destruction is in decrease from 4090 dollars of Gross Domestic Product. In addition, environmental costs have to been taken into account in calculation of GDP. The link between environmental destruction and environmental taxes has been exposed via proportion of the environmental tax in total tax revenue. Our analysis has been based on data gathered from European Environmental Agency, European Commission and The World Bank’s web sites. In this way, EU countries have been compared with OECD countries in terms of economic growth, environmental tax and quantity emission. As a result, economic growth cause varied environmental destruction in different level of development and in between countries. Less quantity of emission is expected in some countries which are keen to use effectively environmental taxes in their tax systems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adiqa Kiani ◽  
Ejaz Ullah ◽  
Khair Muhammad

The main objective of this study is to investigate the impact of poverty, globalization, and environmental degradation on economic growth in the selected SAARC countries. This study is employed panel Autoregressive Distributive Lag (ARDL) technique for empirical analysis using selected SAARC regions including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka over the period of 1980 to 2018. Globalization impacts economic growth positively and significantly.  In addition to this the significant negative relationship is found between population and economic growth. The results show that poverty is positively related with environmental degradation. Furthermore, the results indicate that globalization is positively and significantly associated with environmental degradation in the SAARC region. Finally, the results show that urbanization is positive and significantly associated with environmental degradation, which could be the serious concerns for the policy makers to control.


1973 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-30
Author(s):  
Syed Nawab Haider Naqvi

The recent uncertainties about aid flows have underscored the need for achieving an early independence from foreign aid. The Perspective Plan (1,965-85) had envisaged the termination of Pakistan's dependence on foreign aid by 1985. However, in the context of West Pakistan alone the time horizon can now be advanced by several years with considerable confidence in its economy to pull the trick. The difficulties of achieving independence from foreign aid can be seen by reference to the fact that aid flows make it possible for the policy-maker to pursue such ostensibly incompatible objectives as a balance in international payments (i.e., foreign aid finances the balance of payments), higher rates of economic growth (Lei, it pulls up domestic saving and investment levels), a high level of employment (i.e., it keeps the industries working at a fuller capacity than would otherwise be the case), and a reasonably stable price level (i.e., it lets a higher level of imports than would otherwise be possible). Without aid, then a simultaneous attainment of all these objectives at the former higher levels together with the balance in foreign payments may become well-nigh impos¬sible. Choices are, therefore, inevitable not for definite places in the hierarchy of values, but rather for occasional "trade-offs". That is to say, we will have to" choose how much to sacrifice for the attainment of one goal for the sake of somewhat better realization of another.


Author(s):  
Cathie Martin ◽  
Tom Chevalier

Why did historical anti-poverty programs in Britain, Denmark and France differ so dramatically in their goals, beneficiaries and agents for addressing poverty? Different cultural views of poverty contributed to how policy makers envisioned anti-poverty reforms. Danish elites articulated social investments in peasants as necessary to economic growth, political stability and societal strength. British elites viewed the lower classes as a challenge to these goals. The French perceived the poor as an opportunity for Christian charity. Fiction writers are overlooked political agents who engage in policy struggles. Collectively, writers contribute to a country's distinctive ‘cultural constraint’, or symbols and narratives, which appears in the national-level aggregation of literature. To assess cross-national variations in cultural depictions of poverty, this article uses historical case studies and quantitative textual analyses of 562 British, 521 Danish and 498 French fictional works from 1770 to 1920.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ajiang Chen ◽  
Pengli Cheng ◽  
Yajuan Luo

The phenomenon of "cancer villages" has emerged in many parts of rural China, drawing media attention and becoming a fact of social life. However, the relationship between pollution and disease is often hard to discern. Through sociological analysis of several villages with different social and economic structures, the authors offer a comprehensive, historically grounded analysis of the coexistence between the incidence of cancer, environmental pollution and villagers’ lifestyles, as well as the perceptions, claims and responses of different actors. They situate the appearance of "cancer villages" in the context of social, economic and cultural change in China, tracing the evolution of the issue over two decades, and providing deep insights into the complex interactions and trade-offs between economic growth, environmental change and public health.


Author(s):  
Julie Snorek

AbstractSustaining the water-energy-food nexus for the future requires new governance approaches and joint management across sectors. The challenges to the implementation of the nexus are many, but not insurmountable. These include trade-offs between sectors, difficulties of communication across the science-policy interface, the emergence of new vulnerabilities resulting from implementation of policies, and the perception of high social and economic costs. In the context of the Sustainability in the W-E-F Nexus conference May 19-20, 2014, the session on ‘Governance and Management of the Nexus: Structures and Institutional Capacities’ discussed these problems as well as tools and solutions to nexus management. The session demonstrated three key findings: 1. Trade-offs in the Water-Energy-Food Nexus should be expanded to include the varied and shifting social and power relations; 2. Sharing knowledge between users and policy makers promotes collective learning and science-policy-stakeholder communication; and 3. Removing subsidies or seeking the ‘right price’ for domestic resources vis à vis international markets is not always useful; rather the first imperative is to gauge current and future costs at the national scale.


Author(s):  
Sri Satya Kanaka Nagendra Jayanty ◽  
William J. Sawaya ◽  
Michael D. Johnson

Engineers, policy makers, and managers have shown increasing interest in increasing the sustainability of products over their complete lifecycles and also from the ‘cradle to grave’ or from production to the disposal of each specific product. However, a significant amount of material is disposed of in landfills rather than being reused in some form. A sizeable proportion of the products being dumped in landfills consist of packaging materials for consumable products. Technological advances in plastics, packaging, cleaning, logistics, and new environmental awareness and understanding may have altered the cost structures surrounding the lifecycle use and disposal costs of many materials and products resulting in different cost-benefit trade-offs. An explicit and well-informed economic analysis of reusing certain containers might change current practices and results in significantly less waste disposal in landfills and in less consumption of resources for manufacturing packaging materials. This work presents a method for calculating the costs associated with a complete process of implementing a system to reuse plastic containers for food products. Specifically, the different relative costs of using a container and then either disposing of it in a landfill, recycling the material, or reconditioning the container for reuse and then reusing it are compared explicitly. Specific numbers and values are calculated for the case of plastic milk bottles to demonstrate the complicated interactions and the feasibility of such a strategy.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Στέφανος Φωτόπουλος

This thesis deals with the economics of Greek banks‟ internationalization. The analysisfocuses on specific aspects of Greek banks‟ expansion over the previous decade, aperiod to which little attention has been paid by the pre-existing literature. Seven Greekbanks expanded into the transition economies of South Eastern Europe (SEE), namelyAlbania, Bulgaria, FYROM, Romania, and Serbia, from 2000 to 2009. As a result ofthis expansion, all multinational Greek banks have managed to gain significant shares inthe SEE banking market. The size and pattern of this expansion is analyzed in variousparts of the thesis.The determinants of Greek banks‟ expansion in SEE are examined in theEclectic Paradigm nexus. Considering the expansion in this nexus, the extent to whichGreek banks followed their home customers abroad from 2000 to 2007 is highlighted.Rejecting the “follow the customer” hypothesis for the specific period, the econometricresults provide interesting findings regarding the validity of the three sets of advantagessuggested by the Eclectic Paradigm. Regarding ownership advantages, Greek banks‟intangible assets are found to be more significant than the respective tangible ones,while location advantages exhibit the highest significance among all sets of advantages.More specifically, favorable host country economic and regulatory conditions are foundto have affected significantly Greek banks‟ decision to invest further in the lessdeveloped economies of SEE. Moreover, similarities between host and homegovernance conditions, captured in a unique way in this thesis, are also proved to havebeen a significant factor of Greek banks‟ expansion. Lastly, regarding internalizationadvantages, this analysis casts doubts on the validity of the specific set of advantages. Inreality, it seems as though Greek banks expanded into SEE economies in order to followprofit opportunities, rather than simply to follow their home customers abroad. This thesis also examines the impact of the expansion of Greek banks in the SEEon the host economies. For the needs of the analysis, the ways in which Greek banksaffect the host economies indirectly are considered, mainly through two channels; thebank lending channel (BLC) and the resource allocation channel. The role that Greekbanks have played in the BLC of the domestic economies and in domestic creditstability, along with the contribution of Greek banks to domestic resource allocation,appears to have been crucial for the economic growth of SEE.A descriptive analysis illustrates Greek credit supply and credit stability in thehost economies. Also, the response of Greek banks to adverse host conditions and thetransmission of home adverse conditions to the five transition economies are illustratedthrough a panel of “crisis windows”. A “pull – push factors” descriptive analysisindicates that Greek banks did not respond significantly to non-monetary host shocksbetween 2000 and 2009. Regarding push factors, the research revealed that the onlynegative shocks (generated back in Greece) that Greek banks have transmitted to theSEE economies have been over the last two years of the sample period. This analysisprovides evidence in support of Greek banks‟ role in domestic credit volatility, andtherefore, in credit stability. The issue is further examined econometrically in thespecific context of BLC.In order to examine the role of foreign participants in a domestic BLC, theoperation of such a channel operating in this region is initially tested. The VAR autorecursivemodel and the respective variance decomposition analysis indicate an activeBLC and the beneficiary role of the Greek banks in buffering the negative effectsrelated to a tightening monetary policy. Controlling for demand factors, the workindicates that the decline in credit supply during periods of monetary tightening was driven by the weakness of banks to provide credit rather because of reduced creditdemand.Greek banks, apart from being a credit stabilizer for the five host transitioneconomies, have played an equally beneficiary role in the resource allocation in thedomestic economies. In particular, the extent to which Greek banks have stimulated thereallocation of domestic capital thereby enhancing domestic output growth, isexamined. By employing interactive terms in a fixed effects OLS econometric analysis,results indicate that Greek banks have stimulated economic growth in SEE by supplyingcredit in the region. Not only was it discovered that competition in domestic bankingsystems, being intensified by Greek banks‟ penetration, is positively related to hostoutput growth, but that Greek banks enabled a more efficient reallocation of host capitaland in so doing, stimulated host output growth.In addition to filling a gap in the existing literature of Greek internationalbanking, this thesis also provides an analytical framework for policy makers in order toevaluate the openness of the domestic financial systems in emerging economies. It mayalso serve policy makers as a guide for encouraging the participation of foreign bankinginstitutions in their domestic markets


2016 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 541-562 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernur Acikgoz ◽  
Anthony Amoah ◽  
Mine Yilmazer

This study uses three-country group panel data from 1993 to 2011 in examining the long-run effect of tax burdens (Fiscal index) and government regulations of business (Business index) on economic growth. The outcome of the panel cointegration approach suggests that the variables have a long-run relationship with economic growth. The study finds all the signs of the variables used to be consistent with theoretical expectations. Regarding the variables of interest, it is also found that the Fiscal index has a positive and significant effect on economic growth for all three-country groups. In addition, the Business index has a positive and significant effect for only two-country groups. The study finds that tax burdens and government regulations play an important role on economic growth for most countries in the sample. To harness economic growth prospects, the study offers recommendations for policy makers to consider.


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