Carbon taxes, poverty and compensation options
Citation:
Seamus O'Malley, Barra Roantree, John Curtis, Carbon taxes, poverty and compensation options, ESRI Survey and Statistical Report Series, 98, The Economic and Social Research Institute, October, 2020, 1 - 32Download Item:
Abstract:
This paper examines how the Irish carbon tax can be raised without increasing
poverty and disproportionately affecting low-income households. It shows that
poverty can in fact be reduced and the lowest-income fifth of households left
better-off using a third of revenues from a carbon tax rise on targeted increases in
welfare payments, as proposed in the recent Programme for Government. This
reverses the regressive impact of an uncompensated carbon tax rise, which arises
because goods subject to the carbon tax make up a larger share of spending for
lower- than higher-income households.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/broantreDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Roantree, Barra
Publisher:
The Economic and Social Research InstituteType of material:
ReportCollections
Series/Report no:
ESRI Survey and Statistical Report Series;Availability:
Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Inclusive SocietyDOI:
https://doi.org/10.26504/sustat98Metadata
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