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3rd IEES Seminar on 5th April: I. Monasterolo talks about "Green monetary policies: the missing link between finance and sustainability?"

22/03/2017

On Wednesday, the 5th of April, from 12 pm - 1 pm the 3rd - IEES Seminar is going to take place. Irene Monasterolo, Assistant Professor at the Institute for Ecological Economics in the Research Area Climate Economics is going to talk about "Green monetary policies: the missing link between finance and sustainability?"

Abtract

The UN COP21 climate conference held in Paris in December 2015 reached the remarkable agreement to limit global temperature increase below 2 degrees C above pre-industrial levels. In order to meet this target, a carbon budget of about 1 000 gtCO should be respected (IPCC, 2013). This implies that fossil reserves owned by companies would become unburnable (Leaton, 2012; Kartha et al., 2016). These trends suggest that, from one hand, there is a growing risk to holding equity in fossil fuel companies and, from the other, that there is momentum for investing in the low carbon economy. Indeed, costs of renewable energy production are falling, and returns on renewable energy investments (OECD/IEA, 2015) increasing. Then, expansionary monetary policies, such as the Quantitative Easing (QE) schemes by the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of England (BoE) contribute to keep interest rates low, while Long Term Refinancing Operations (LTRO) set a conditionality for investments. Yet, “green” market failures delays capital mobilization in green new projects at the pace and amount needed. A high-risk perception towards green investments reflects in a higher cost of capital for green project and, at the same time, in risk underpricing for investments in climate relevant sectors, i.e., sectors (and assets) that rely on fossil fuels extraction and use (Battiston et al., 2016). In this seminar we will explore the role that Central Banks’ monetary policies could play to support the transition to a low carbon economy. In particular, we analyse the role of green sovereign bonds as an implementing tool of a green QE, discussing opportunities and challenges. Finally, by applying the Eirin Stock Flow Consistent flow-fund behavioural model (Monasterolo and Raberto, 2016) we show that supporting new green investments through green monetary policies implemented via green sovereign bonds could be superior to green fiscal policies, in terms of macro-economic performance, credit market stability, and distributive effects (income inequality).    

Keywords: green sovereign bonds, green monetary policies, green market failure, flow-fund model, inequality  

The Ecological Economics Research Seminars are taking place at the EcolEcon Instituts meeting room D5.3.033.

For further information have a look at the Ecological Economics Seminar Series (IEES).

Everybody is welcome to join! Please register with emanuele.campiglio@wu.ac.at

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