Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case study

Emission reductions improve the chances that dangerous anthropogenic climate change will be averted, but could also cause some firms financial distress. Corporate failures, especially if they are unnecessary, add to the social cost of abatement. Social value can be permanently destroyed by the disso...

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Main Authors: Caldecott, B, Dericks, G
Format: Journal article
Published: Taylor and Francis 2017
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author Caldecott, B
Dericks, G
author_facet Caldecott, B
Dericks, G
author_sort Caldecott, B
collection OXFORD
description Emission reductions improve the chances that dangerous anthropogenic climate change will be averted, but could also cause some firms financial distress. Corporate failures, especially if they are unnecessary, add to the social cost of abatement. Social value can be permanently destroyed by the dissolution of organizational capital, deadweight losses paid to liquidators, and unemployment. This article proposes using measures of corporate solvency as an objective tool for policy makers to calibrate the optimal stringency of climate change policies, so that they can deliver the least loss of corporate solvency for a given level of emission reductions. They could also be used to determine the generosity of any compensation to address losses to corporate solvency. We demonstrate this approach using a case study of the UK’s Carbon Price Support (a carbon tax).
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spelling oxford-uuid:9a3fd8f2-c71b-4db3-8e9b-3e995187c3bb2022-03-27T00:20:04ZEmpirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case studyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9a3fd8f2-c71b-4db3-8e9b-3e995187c3bbSymplectic Elements at OxfordTaylor and Francis2017Caldecott, BDericks, GEmission reductions improve the chances that dangerous anthropogenic climate change will be averted, but could also cause some firms financial distress. Corporate failures, especially if they are unnecessary, add to the social cost of abatement. Social value can be permanently destroyed by the dissolution of organizational capital, deadweight losses paid to liquidators, and unemployment. This article proposes using measures of corporate solvency as an objective tool for policy makers to calibrate the optimal stringency of climate change policies, so that they can deliver the least loss of corporate solvency for a given level of emission reductions. They could also be used to determine the generosity of any compensation to address losses to corporate solvency. We demonstrate this approach using a case study of the UK’s Carbon Price Support (a carbon tax).
spellingShingle Caldecott, B
Dericks, G
Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case study
title Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case study
title_full Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case study
title_fullStr Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case study
title_full_unstemmed Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case study
title_short Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: A UK case study
title_sort empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency a uk case study
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AT dericksg empiricalcalibrationofclimatepolicyusingcorporatesolvencyaukcasestudy