open access publication

Preprint, 2024

Economic Growth and Climate Change: Many Trajectories, Many Destinations

SSRN Electronic Journal, ISSN 1556-5068, 10.2139/ssrn.4793909

Contributors

Steger, Thomas Michael 0000-0002-2489-6716 [1] Trimborn, Timo 0000-0001-8749-7176 [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Leipzig University
  2. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];
  3. [2] Aarhus University
  4. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

To gain insights into the mechanisms that shape the interaction between economic growth and climate change, we analyze the simplified DICE through the lens of growth theory. We analytically show that this model exhibits a continuum of saddle-point stable steady states, a property that carries over to a large set of (analytical and numerical) IAMs. This novel insight is important because it implies initial conditions of stock variables, notoriously difficult to calibrate, matter for the ultimate steady state, i.e. for the long-run economic and climate outcomes. However, we also show that a lack of information about the stock of global capital is considerably less consequential than a lack of information about GHG in the atmosphere. These properties have important implications for understanding the consequences of delayed climate policy implementation and the optimal carbon tax. We employ numerical techniques to show how a postponement of optimal climate policy implementation leads to a higher long-run temperature. We also show that the SCC-to-GDP ratio is in fact largely constant, despite transitional dynamics. However, its level depends strongly on the point in time the policy is implemented. Finally, we employ the setup to better understand the consequences of stronger TFP growth for the climate.

Keywords

Dice, GHG, IAM, TFP growth, atmosphere, capital, carbon tax, changes, climate, climate change, climate outcomes, climate policy implementation, conditions, consequences, continuum, dynamics, economic growth, global capitalism, growth, growth theory, i., implementation, information, interaction, lack, lack of information, lens, levels, long-run, long-run temperature, matter, mechanism, model, numerical techniques, optimal carbon tax, outcomes, policy, policy implementation, postponement, properties, ratio, setup, state, steady state, stock, stock variables, tax, technique, temperature, theory, transition dynamics, variables

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