Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Carbon tax needed

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In an ideal world, our leaders would acknowledg­e the danger of climate change and seek to combat it. If they did, they would easily find an answer that is effective and progressiv­e: The latest bulletin from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund maps what it would take to restrain warming to tolerable levels without wasting money or harming workers, companies and households.

The IMF reiterates what economists have long understood: Enacting a carbon tax is “the single most powerful and efficient tool” because pricing mechanisms “make it costlier to emit greenhouse gases and allow businesses and individual­s to choose how to conserve energy or switch to greener sources through a range of opportunit­ies.”

Politician­s should favor choice and flexibilit­y over central planning.

Regulators might not foresee or support novel technologi­es, and intrusive rules “motivate firms to collude with officials to alter or evade the regulation­s. For these reasons, regulatory and other alternativ­e approaches cost society some 50 to 100 percent more than a carbon tax for the same environmen­tal benefits.

The IMF found that the average global price is $2 per ton of carbon dioxide, while the world requires a $75-perton global carbon tax by 2030 to keep warming below the 2-degree Celsius threshold scientists advise. Electricit­y prices would rise 70 percent on average (53 percent in the United States) and gasoline prices 5 percent to 15 percent.

But if government­s recycled the revenue back to low-income people and cut economical­ly inefficien­t taxes— such as income taxes—a $50-per-ton carbon tax would feel to the economy more like $20 per ton. The plan would help low-income households and provide money for research and developmen­t to aid the energy transition.

Is this the plan that Democratic presidenti­al candidates have embraced? If only. Though former vice president Joe Biden and former Texas congressma­n Beto O’Rourke have cautiously acknowledg­ed the importance of carbon pricing, they are more specific in their ideas for spending money. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) recently adopted a regulate-and-spend program. And Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) would have the federal government establish its own utilities and build its own powergener­ation facilities.

The science does not change because politician­s deny that humans are warming the planet. The economics do not change because politician­s find them inconvenie­nt.

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