New article "Economic Growth, Income Distribution, and Climate Change" Lance Taylor, Armon Rezai and Duncan Foley (2018)

15/05/2018

New article

"Economic Growth, Income Distribution, and Climate Change"

 published in Ecological Economics Lance Taylor, Armon Rezai and Duncan Foley (2018) “Economic Growth, Income Distribution, and Climate Change”, Ecological Economics, 146, 164-172.

Abstract: We present a model based on Keynesian aggregate demand and labor productivity growth to study how climate damage affects the long-run evolution of the economy. Climate change induced by greenhouse gas lowers profitability, reducing investment and cutting output in the short and long runs. Short-run employment falls due to deficient demand. In the long run productivity growth is slower, lowering potential income levels. Climate policy can increase incomes and employment in the short and long runs while a continuation of business-as-usual leads to a dystopian income distribution with affluence for few and high levels of unemployment for the rest.