A bit dated, from Feb 28th of this year, but given the big push for Paris and the Pope’s encyclical, it is germane at the moment. -Anthony
Stanford research reveals that it is ultimately people – not corporations – who would bear the costs of climate change regulation. Under a hypothetical carbon tax, households in the lowest income group would pay as a percent of income more than twice what households in the highest 10 percent of income distribution pay. The findings suggest a fairer way to regulate greenhouse gases in the United States.

New research finds the heaviest burden for climate change regulation falls on the poor, for whom basic necessities take up a bigger chunk of the budget.
The heaviest burden for climate change regulation costs falls on people – especially lower income groups – and not corporations, according to new Stanford research.
The reason is that companies ultimately pass on those costs to people. For the poor, basic necessities take up a bigger chunk of the budget than for the rich.
“Households in the lowest income group pay, as a percent of income, more than twice what households in the highest 10 percent of the income distribution pay,” wrote economist Charles Kolstad, a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and the Precourt Institute for Energy.
The research gives impetus to adopting a fairer approach to carbon regulation costs, Kolstad said.
“This regressivity can be addressed through transfer payments, if and when the U.S. decides to regulate greenhouse gases leading to climate change,” said Kolstad, who researches environmental economics, regulation and climate change. As an example, he suggests reducing the payroll tax for lower income groups as a way to make a carbon tax more fair.
The study examined Bureau of Economic Analysis data and used a $15 per metric ton carbon “tax” as a scenario. In other words, every person or organization (such as a company) that emits carbon into the atmosphere would pay a tax on the total amount emitted multiplied by $15 per metric ton of carbon. The researchers looked at how such a hypothetical tax would hit individual income groups, industries and different regions.
Kolstad said that price and substitution effects may somewhat dampen the regressive nature of such costs. For example, when prices change, people change what they do. If the price of heating oil goes up, people may use more electricity or natural gas to warm their homes.
The paper was published as a SIEPR policy brief and is based on detailed analysis by Kolstad and Corbett Grainger of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Fairness issue
Their research points out that carbon regulation involves the question of who pays the most and the least – an issue with political and social consequences. Analyzing greenhouse cost burdens is important due to the urgency of coping with global warming, which may lead to sea-level rise, local temperature and precipitation changes, and increased frequency of extreme weather.
Kolstad said, “One of the most significant problems associated with passing any sort of legislation is perceived fairness. Although there are other issues, fairness in paying for the legislation and fairness in the benefits that the legislation generates can be key to passage. This work helps understand the extent to which paying for carbon legislation can be perceived as fair or unfair, with obvious remedies for correcting any unfairness.”
The poorest households spend a higher percentage of their income on fuels for heating and transportation, while higher income individuals spend proportionately a greater amount on services, which usually have lower than average carbon emissions per unit of output.
“Emissions increase more slowly as income increases. Thus, one would expect some regressivity in a carbon tax,” the study stated.
Kolstad expected the regressive nature of carbon regulations to be even more dramatic.
“I thought that a carbon regulation would be far more regressive, falling on the shoulders of the poor more than it does,” he said.
This expectation, he said, was based on the fact that lower income Americans often drive older, less fuel-efficient cars and frequently commute long distances to work to access lower cost housing. “Although that mental model may be correct, transportation fuel is only part of the picture,” he said.
Impacts on industry
While the costs of greenhouse gas regulations are broadly spread over the entire economy, some industries are hit harder, according to the study’s hypothetical carbon tax. These would include electric power, fertilizer, cement and coal-related industries like mining and transportation. Lime, a key ingredient in the manufacture of cement, would see the highest cost increase at 15 percent.
“The extent to which these industries are ultimately disadvantaged depends on the extent to which they are able to pass costs on to customers,” the research noted.
Still, these most highly affected industries contributed only 1 percent to the total gross output of the U.S. economy in 2011, according to the study.
“This suggests that the adverse incidence of such a tax can be ameliorated through highly targeted financial assistance, without reducing the incentive benefits of a carbon tax,” the paper stated.
Another question is which regions bear the most or least cost of carbon regulations. This is a bit more complicated to examine, as the coal mining companies operating in Wyoming may have owners in San Francisco or New York, Kolstad said.
Research shows that while the total out-of-the-pocket carbon tax costs may be similar across U.S. regions, the price of electricity may vary considerably. Thus, one could expect higher electrical costs in coal-dependent states like Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama.
As for whether the United States adopts greenhouse gas regulations, he is pessimistic in the short run – but optimistic in the long run.
“Policy windows happen in which the conditions are right for congressional action. We are not in one now, but I am confidant these will arise at some point in the future,” Kolstad said.
All based on the false premise that more CO2 is bad,
On May 25, 2015 veteran meteorologist Joe d’Aleo and I published our paper entitled “Winters not Summers Increase Mortality and Stress the Economy”
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/05/24/winters-not-summers-increase-mortality-and-stress-the-economy/
Our objective is to draw attention to the very serious issue of Excess Winter Deaths, which especially targets the elderly and the poor.
It is hard to believe that anyone could be so foolish as to drive up the cost of energy AND also reduce the reliability of the electrical grid, which is what politicians have done by subsidizing grid-connected wind and solar power.
When uninformed politicians fool with energy systems, real people suffer and die.
Cheap, reliable, abundant energy is the lifeblood of modern society. It IS that simple.
Best wishes to all, Allan
Every year, Excess Winter Deaths are shockingly high. There are about 100,000 Excess Winter Deaths every year in the USA, and about 10,000 Excess Winter Deaths every year in Canada. About 50,000 Excess Winter Deaths occurred in the winter of 2012/13 in the UK. Even in warmer climates, cold temperatures are the greatest killer – death rates in Australian cities were up to 30 per cent higher in winter than summer. The recent Lancet study confirms this fact, even in very warm countries like Thailand.
“Substitution.” Right…
When I lived in the Northeast, I didn’t ever visit a single house that had an oil-fueled heating system, AND a gas-fueled heating system, AND an electrical heating system.
“Substitution” only occurs when the cost of making the substitution is between zero and at least one cent less than the difference between the prices of the original product and the substituted product (and the amount of substitution declines as you approach the “no real difference” point).
For a top of the line NG furnace – the cost of the unit alone is around $3,500. You’re looking at around $1,500 to $2,000 for a mid-priced one. Then add in the cost of installing it (easily $1,000), the cost of the permits and inspections (depends on the greed of the State – but at least $500 more). So, you had better be getting a savings of between $3,000 and $5,000 in amortized dollars just converting to NG from fuel oil.
And just about the time you’ve installed it – guess what, the Greens will have found a way to skyrocket the price of NG (they’re working hard on it right now, in fact).
This study is a good first start. Now move on to the 500X household impact difference represented by the tax credits of renewable energy systems. The credits are flowing to the upper income households almost exclusively.
From the policy over reach manual authored by Gruber, you first construct a very confusing system to hide the fact that a highly regressive carbon tax system has been enacted. Then you maximize political credit for claiming to redistribute wealth with a portion of the funds. You might also need a party leader to say that we will read what’s in the bill after passage.
Reblogged this on Climatism and commented:
It’s the great irony of ‘climate change’ that the protagonists of the green faith, usually of leftist or progressive persuasion, lay claim to be the “champions of the poor”. When ultimately the radical “save the planet” climate policies and futile green schemes, dreamt up in ivory towers of the sanctimonious political elite and wealthy chattering class, ultimately end up hurting the poorest in society.
Whether it be Carbon taxes, aimed to increase the cost of electricity to inhibit its use, expensive renewable energy, or even the World Bank’s no-coal decree, that would leave developing nations in the dark, radical climate policy does much for the political elite and very little for the impoverished majority …
“Stanford research reveals that it is ultimately people – not corporations – who would bear the costs of climate change regulation. Under a hypothetical carbon tax, households in the lowest income group would pay as a percent of income more than twice what households in the highest 10 percent of income distribution pay.” ~Ivy League
It appears to me that it wording of this study creates a false dichotomy between the most wealthy and the lowest income groups. The economic costs to the middle class and/or small business owners are not even mentioned, when in fact this may be the most significant change of all.
Restaurants and cattle owners are would be unable to function in the CLIMATE created by these regs. He deflects from this fact by naming a few industries that would be “most” affected or “hardest hit” by this environmentalist scheming and engineering. By phrasing it this way, the other 1400 businesses that would be newly added to the reach of greenhouse gases regulations are left out of the discussion and are swept under the rug. It was a trump l’oei, not a statement of the obvious.
What do the poor think they are going to buy when all of the small businesses and restaurants fail?
The real question is why are the environmentalist social engineers methodically and relentlessly destroying Purchasing Power here at home,
and then using Purchasing Power to adjust up the incomes of the Chinese and others to show that they have higher incomes than they do?
Our single family income stays the same, and environmentalist regulations eat quickly away at what that income will buy. Plus they use compulsion to make me purchase worthless, expensive, ineffective products from greens.