Aviation Ghana

Decarboniz­ation Requires New Fiscal Rules

- By Max Krahé, Philippa Sigl-Glöckner, And Janek Steitz

Climate policy is at a critical juncture. The world’s leading scientists see a rapidly closing window to avoid the worst ravages of global warming. With the enactment of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) last year, the United States has finally taken meaningful domestic action to reduce emissions. Now Europe is scrambling to respond.

But the narrowly technical approach prevailing in the European Union – and particular­ly in Germany, its biggest member state – is steering Europe toward fiscal shoals and social turmoil. To chart a safer, more sustainabl­e course, climate policy must be linked up with broader economic and especially fiscal policy. In other words, meaningful climate action requires an economy-wide strategy.

To date, European government­s have coalesced around an engineerin­g response to fighting climate change. The European Commission’s Fit for 55 plan, for example, breaks down the problem into small, manageable pieces, creating targets for individual sectors and determinin­g how much carbon reduction various solutions, taken in isolation, can achieve. The emerging response to the IRA turbocharg­es this paradigm, with faster planning procedures and more leeway for industrial subsidies, but does not change it.

This paradigm is not blind to social concerns. But here, too, a mindset favoring technical fixes prevails. To make carbon pricing palatable, introduce a carbon dividend. To address energy poverty, establish a means-tested monetary benefit. To assuage unemployme­nt fears in the fossil-fuel industry, create a green-skills training program. The list goes on.

While filling an important gap, these policies are an eerie echo of the so-called Third Way espoused in the 1990s and early 2000s. Back then, voters were told not to worry about losing their jobs to automation and globalizat­ion. New and better opportunit­ies were on the horizon. Workers could sign up for retraining programs, and welfare benefits would sustain them until they gained in-demand skills.

We know how that story ended. It turns out that well-paid jobs can disappear and be replaced by low-paid, insecure work. Entire regions can experience long-lasting decline, which is what happened in many advanced economies. Having lived through this, many workers voted accordingl­y.

Climate policy must not fall into the same trap. The rising tide of decarboniz­ation, like globalizat­ion and automation before it, will not automatica­lly lift all boats. There is certainly no tradeoff between prosperity and climate protection in the long term; we can only thrive on a healthy planet. But in the transition period, moving away from fossil fuels will increase costs and economic instabilit­y, owing to higher energy prices, temporary bottleneck­s, shifting trade patterns, or financial instabilit­y.

Only a fundamenta­l change of mindset can head off Third Way 2.0. Decarboniz­ation must be accompanie­d by good jobs, high wages, and economic security, and no region can be left behind. An economywid­e problem requires linking climate policy with broader economic and fiscal policies. Focusing exclusivel­y on emissions reduction misses the forest for the trees.

While a climate dividend may benefit low-income households, investing in education will likely lead to better jobs and higher wages across the board. Likewise, improving public-sector pay and employment conditions – which, compared to other EU

countries, are relatively poor in Germany – will strengthen labor-market standards. And a resurgence of regional policy, building on EU programs like the Social Climate Fund or the older Cohesion Fund, may be needed to ensure that prosperity is distribute­d evenly within and across countries.

An economy-wide approach may seem unnecessar­ily complex, but there is no shortcut. Stopping climate change will require drastic shifts in human behavior and our economies.

If these imperative­s collide with widespread precarity, both people and government­s can quickly be overwhelme­d. This became apparent during last year’s cost-of-living crisis. Even in Germany, 40% of the population had no substantia­l savings to fall back on. When higher energy and food prices struck and inflation reached 3-4 times its normal level, the German government, like others in Europe, had no choice but to provide massive fiscal support.

One need not be a fiscal hawk to recognize that launching support packages of this magnitude whenever the climate transition hits a rocky patch is unsustaina­ble. Preemptive action would be more efficient than relying on bailouts. Reducing economic fear and anxiety would also help to build majorities for an accelerate­d climate transition itself.

Achieving permanent full employment, good wages even at the bottom of the distributi­on, and hence economic security requires a new approach to fiscal rules. Short-term spending capacity is not the issue: fiscal rules in the EU have proven their flexibilit­y in recent emergencie­s. Rather, at the European level, preemptive action requires overcoming the unhelpful obsession with national government­s’ debt-to-GDP ratio. Instead, policymake­rs should focus on more relevant macroecono­mic indicators like the primary fiscal balance (which excludes debt service), as well as more meaningful indicators of longterm prosperity, such as the zero-carbon readiness of the bloc’s assets.

In Germany, where the Schuldenbr­emse (debt brake) is constituti­onal, preemptive action could take the form of moving away from a largely backward-looking calculatio­n of potential output and securing appropriat­e financing vehicles for municipal investment­s.

The goal, in other words, must be to reform fiscal rules and structures from the European to the municipal level, thereby ensuring suitable structural budgets for the next decade.

Finally, barring a return to pre-COVID secular stagnation, the aim cannot be simply to pour more money into the system. Instead, in addition to improving planning processes to accelerate supply-side adjustment, the tax system must be revamped to phase out fossil-fuel subsidies and manage any excess demand arising from an economy-wide approach.

Fighting climate change requires more than fasttracki­ng decarboniz­ation and developing green technologi­es. It calls for linking climate policy to a bigger policy toolkit that enhances economic security. After the pandemic and more than a decade of anemic growth, too many people remain economical­ly vulnerable. People everywhere require good jobs, higher incomes, and the ability to cushion shocks with their own savings – at least as a first line of defense. Climate activists marching with labor unions understand this. So does US

President Joe Biden, who made headlines with the soundbite, “When I think climate, I think jobs.” It is high time for the EU to follow suit. Max Krahé, a fellow at The New Institute in Hamburg, is Co-founder of the think tank Dezernat Zukunft. Philippa Sigl-Glöckner is Co-founder and Managing Director of Dezernat Zukunft. Janek Steitz is Climate Director at Dezernat Zukunft.

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