This paper provides a macroeconomic framework to evaluate the social and economic consequences generated by a shift of investment to low-carbon options. We introduce into a standard growth framework a modified Lotka–Volterra model for wage and employment determination to address both the long-run dynamics of the economic system in terms of carbon emission and GDP growth and the short-term macroeconomic fluctuations in terms of unemployment and inequality. We use this framework to compare the results of different combinations of three strategies for carbon emissions reductions: improvement in energy efficiency, expansion of the renewable energy sector, and the direct reduction in carbon emissions. We show that the shift to low-carbon investment required to achieve the targeted reductions increases employment and the labour share but slows down GDP growth and wages.
Systems-dynamic analysis of employment and inequality impacts of low-carbon investments / Bernardo, Giovanni; D’Alessandro, Simone. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL INNOVATION AND SOCIETAL TRANSITIONS. - ISSN 2210-4224. - 21:(2016), pp. 123-144. [10.1016/j.eist.2016.04.006]
Systems-dynamic analysis of employment and inequality impacts of low-carbon investments
Giovanni BernardoPrimo
;
2016
Abstract
This paper provides a macroeconomic framework to evaluate the social and economic consequences generated by a shift of investment to low-carbon options. We introduce into a standard growth framework a modified Lotka–Volterra model for wage and employment determination to address both the long-run dynamics of the economic system in terms of carbon emission and GDP growth and the short-term macroeconomic fluctuations in terms of unemployment and inequality. We use this framework to compare the results of different combinations of three strategies for carbon emissions reductions: improvement in energy efficiency, expansion of the renewable energy sector, and the direct reduction in carbon emissions. We show that the shift to low-carbon investment required to achieve the targeted reductions increases employment and the labour share but slows down GDP growth and wages.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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