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Journal article

Environmental taxes and productivity: Lessons from Canadian manufacturing

Abstract

This paper investigates how environmental taxes affect manufacturing productivity by examining British Columbia’s revenue-neutral carbon tax. I develop a new hypothesis, the “Productivity Dividend Hypothesis,” to show that environmental taxes can positively affect productivity by recycling tax revenues to reduce corporate income taxes. This revenue-recycling increases investment and could raise productivity more than environmental taxes lower productivity by diverting resources from production. I evaluate this hypothesis using detailed confidential plant-level data. I find that the carbon tax lowers productivity, although this is offset to some extent by the revenue-recycling. For some plants, the policy generates a net gain in productivity.

Authors

Yamazaki A

Journal

Journal of Public Economics, Vol. 205, ,

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2022

DOI

10.1016/j.jpubeco.2021.104560

ISSN

0047-2727

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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