Environmental Policy Instruments and Greenhouse Gas Emissions: VAR Analysis
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32797
Environmental Policy Instruments and Greenhouse Gas Emissions: VAR Analysis

Authors: Veronika Solilová, Danuše Nerudová

Abstract:

The paper examines the interaction between the environmental taxation, size of government spending on environmental protection and greenhouse gas emissions and gross inland energy consumption. The aim is to analyze the effects of environmental taxation and government spending on environmental protection as an environmental policy instruments on greenhouse gas emissions and gross inland energy consumption in the EU15. The empirical study is performed using a VAR approach with the application of aggregated data of EU15 over the period 1995 to 2012. The results provide the evidence that the reactions of greenhouse gas emission and gross inland energy consumption to the shocks of environmental policy instruments are strong, mainly in the short term and decay to zero after about 8 years. Further, the reactions of the environmental policy instruments to the shocks of greenhouse gas emission and gross inland energy consumption are also strong in the short term, however with the deferred effects. In addition, the results show that government spending on environmental protection together with gross inland energy consumption has stronger effect on greenhouse gas emissions than environmental taxes in EU15 over the examined period.

Keywords: VAR analysis, greenhouse gas emissions, environmental taxation, government spending.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1338028

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 1763

References:


[1] OECD. Evaluating Economic Instruments for Environmental Policy, Paris, OECD, 1997, pp. 141. ISBN:978-92-6415-360-8.
[2] K. Kubátová, Daňová teorie a politika. Wolters Kluwer, Praha, 2010, pp. 275. ISBN: 978-80-7357-574-8.
[3] A. C. Pigou, The Economics of Welfare. London: Macmillan, 1920. Available on http://www.econlib.org/library/NPDBooks/ Pigou/pgEW0.html.
[4] J. P. Hines, “Excise Taxes,” University of Michigan and NBER. Working papers series. Product Number WP 2007-2, 2007. Available on: http://www.bus.umich.edu/otpr/WP2007-2.pdf.
[5] European Energy Exchange. Auctions by the transitional common Auction platform. Report June 2014. European Commissions, 2014. Available on http://ec.europa.eu/clima/policies/ets/cap/auctioning/ docs/cap_report_201406_en.pdf.
[6] V. Solilová, D. Nerudová, “Overall approach of the EU in the question of emissions: EU emissions trading system and CO2 taxation,” Procedia Economics and Finance, pp. 616-625. published online, September 2014.
[7] W. Baumol, W. E. Oates, 1988. The Theory of Environmental Policy. Cambridge University Press, 1988, pp. 299. ISBN 978-05-2131-112-0.
[8] Eurostat. Environmental statistics and accounts in Europe. Publications Office of the European Union. Luxembourg, 2010, pp. 346. ISBN 978- 92-79-15701-1.
[9] Eurostat, “Environmental protection expenditure in Europe”. Online data code: env_ac_exp2 and env_ac_exp1r2, for last available year 2011.
[10] C. Bohringer, T. Rutherford, “Carbon Taxes with Exemptions in an Open Economy: A General Equilibrium Analysis of the German Tax Initiative,” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management; Vol. 32, pp. 189-203, 1997.
[11] J. Cuervo, Ved P. Gandhi, “Carbon taxes: Their macroeconomic effects and prospects for global adoption,” EconPapers, Revista Desarrollo Y Sociedad, 1999.
[12] C. A. Sims, “Macroeconomics and reality,” Econometrica, vol. 48., No. 1, pp. 1-48, 1980.
[13] F. Canova, M. Ciccarelli, “Panel vector autoregressive models a survey,” Working paper series, No 1507, January 2013, European Central Bank. Available on: https://www.ecb.europa.eu/pub/research/ authors/profiles/matteo-ciccarelli.en.html.
[14] G. Dökmen, “Environmental tax and economic growth: a panel VAR analysis,” 2012. Available on: http://iibf.erciyes.edu.tr/dergi/sayi40/ ERUJFEAS_Jun2012_43to65.pdf.
[15] M. Watson, “Vector autoregressions and cointegration,” In Handbook of Econometrics, Volume IV. R. F. Engle and D. McFadden (eds). Elsevier Science Ltd., Amsterdam. Available on: http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/ ~dbackus/Identification/VARs/Watson_VARs_handbook_94.pdf.
[16] H. Lütkepohl, Introduction to multiple time series analysis. Springer- Verlag: New York, 1991, pp. 1-545. ISBN 0-387-53194-7.
[17] H. Lütkepohl, New introduction to multiple time series analysis. Springer: Berlin, 2005, pp. 764. ISBN 978-3-540-27752-1.
[18] D. Waggoner, Tao A. Zha, “Conditional forecasts in Dynamic Multivariate Models,” Review of Economics and Statistics, vol. 81(4), pp. 639-651.
[19] V. Ramey, M. Shapiro, “Costly capital reallocation and the effects of government spending,” Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, vol. 48, pp. 145-194, 1998.
[20] G. Elliott, T. J. Rothenberg, J. H. Stock, “Efficient tests for an autoregressive unit root,” Econometrica, vol. 64., pp. 813-836, 1996.
[21] P. S. Sephton, “Response surface estimates of the KPSS stationarity test,” Economics Letters, vol. 47., pp. 255-261, 1995.