National Post

If carbon taxes work, why all the new regulation­s?

- Ross Mckitrick Financial Post Ross Mckitrick is a professor of economics at the University of Guelph and a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute.

Many economists were excited a few years ago when the federal Liberals committed to introducin­g a carbon tax. Whether they were specialist­s in environmen­tal economics or not, they knew from their introducto­ry textbooks that emission pricing is a good tool for controllin­g pollution. And here was a major political party citing economic theory to support its policy plans. How enlightene­d!

But the specialist literature carried a warning my colleagues largely ignored. As I tried to caution ( more than once) emission pricing makes sense if it is used instead of, not on top of, regulation. Because the different policy instrument­s amplify each others’ costs, if emission regulation­s are not removed before adding the tax, the outcome can be worse than doing nothing at all.

Unfortunat­ely, most Canadian economists were happy to do the light lifting of telling government­s why they should introduce a new tax, but very few wanted to help with the heavy lifting of convincing the same government­s they first needed to repeal renewable energy mandates, home retrofit subsidies, ethanol mandates, electric vehicle subsidies, appliance efficiency standards, new energy efficiency codes for buildings, new motor vehicle fuel regulation­s, coal phase- outs, and a host of other fashionabl­e green policies, support for which is nowadays viewed as a litmus test for being a good citizen.

So we have ended up with the worst of both worlds. None of the inefficien­t policies was repealed, carbon taxes were layered on top of them and now the government is charging ahead with even more misguided climate regulation­s. The recent throne speech brings back for the millionth time home energy retrofit subsidies, despite ample evidence ( going back to the old CHIP grants

in the 1970s) that most of the money is wasted, paying people to do things they were planning to do anyway. Even worse is the proposed Clean Fuel Standard, a highcost boondoggle that aims to bring the carbon intensity of fuels down by a small amount, at what will be an exorbitant cost per tonne that far exceeds the carbon tax rate.

So if, as the government insists, carbon taxes “work,”

why all the regulation­s? The reality is the government never understood or endorsed the economic theory of carbon taxes, it just liked the virtue signalling and the revenue.

Carbon taxes “work” but it’s important to understand what the word means in this context. The tax is supposed to charge fuel users for their estimated contributi­on to climate change, and to nudge everyone into adopting the lowest-cost emission reductions. If the tax is set at a reasonable amount, it accomplish­es both goals automatica­lly, so in that sense it “works.” But when costly regulation­s are layered on top both goals are thwarted. It’s the combinatio­n of policies that fails.

When critics charge that carbon taxes don’t work they usually mean that emissions don’t fall by much in response. This may be true, but it doesn’t mean the tax didn’t work; it just means that the fuel to which it applied has an inelastic demand, i. e., people don’t adjust their purchases by much in response to a price increase. This doesn’t mean regulation­s would work any better: if anything, it implies they will impose much higher costs than people would be willing to pay if given the choice.

On the other hand, there is a valid version of the “carbon taxes don’t work” argument: if government­s make a promise that we can reach the Paris climate targets easily and painlessly by implementi­ng a carbon tax with rebates or tax cuts so most people come out ahead, then no, in that sense carbon taxes won’t work. To get to Paris- level emission cuts will require a carbon tax at a high enough level that it will shrink the rest of the tax base by more than the carbon tax brings in. Revenue- neutrality for government­s will require other taxes to go up, not down.

And that’s in the rarefied world where carbon taxes are used in isolation. Throw inefficien­t regulation­s into the mix and the costs go even higher. Sadly, we have a government in Ottawa that seems determined not only to set unrealisti­c emission targets, but also to use an inefficien­t mix of instrument­s that inflate the costs even further. Carbon taxes can work, but not the way Canada is using them.

 ?? Chris Yo ung / the cana dian press files ?? The government has never understood or endorsed the economic theory of carbon taxes, but it likes the virtue
signalling and revenue, Ross Mckitrick writes.
Chris Yo ung / the cana dian press files The government has never understood or endorsed the economic theory of carbon taxes, but it likes the virtue signalling and revenue, Ross Mckitrick writes.

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