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Jobs and climate policy: Evidence from British...
Journal article

Jobs and climate policy: Evidence from British Columbia's revenue-neutral carbon tax

Abstract

This paper examines the employment impact of British Columbia's revenue-neutral carbon tax implemented in 2008. While all industries appear to benefit from the redistributed tax revenues, the most carbon-intensive and trade-sensitive industries see employment fall with the tax, while clean service industries see employment rise. By aggregating across industries I find the BC carbon tax generated, on average, a small but statistically significant 0.74 percent annual increases in employment over the 2007–2013 period. This paper provides initial evidence showing how a revenue-neutral carbon tax may not adversely affect employment.

Authors

Yamazaki A

Journal

Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, Vol. 83, , pp. 197–216

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

May 1, 2017

DOI

10.1016/j.jeem.2017.03.003

ISSN

0095-0696

Labels

Fields of Research (FoR)

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