Do Carbon Taxes Kill Jobs? Firm-Level Evidence From British Columbia
Authors: Azevedo, Deven, Wolff, Hendrik, and Yamazaki, Akio
Overview
Abstract (English)
This paper investigates the employment impacts of British Columbia’s revenue neutral carbon tax. Using the synthetic control method with firm-level data, we find considerable heterogeneity in employment responses to the policy. We show that firm size matters. In particular, the carbon tax had a negative impact on large emission-intensive firms, but simultaneous tax cuts and transfers increased the purchasing power of low income households, substantially benefiting small businesses in the service sector and food/clothing manufacturing. Furthermore, we find that aggregate employment was not adversely affected by the policy. Our results provide additional insight for the “job-shifting hypothesis” of revenue neutral carbon taxes.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Azevedo, Deven, Wolff, Hendrik, and Yamazaki, Akio |
Publication Year | 2023 |
Title | Do Carbon Taxes Kill Jobs? Firm-Level Evidence From British Columbia |
Journal Name | Climate Change Economics |
Pages | 2350010 |
DOI | 10.1142/S2010007823500100 |
Publication Language | English |
- Azevedo, Deven
- Azevedo, Deven, Wolff, Hendrik, and Yamazaki, Akio
- Do Carbon Taxes Kill Jobs? Firm-Level Evidence From British Columbia
- Climate Change Economics
- 2023
- 2350010
- 10.1142/S2010007823500100