Policy Papers

The Fiscal Implications of Climate Change

February 22, 2008

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The Fiscal Implications of Climate Change, (USA: International Monetary Fund, 0) accessed December 22, 2024
The views expressed in this paper are those of the staff and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Board of the IMF. The Executive Board's assessment is summarized in the Public Information Notice. Some country-specific or market-sensitive information may have been deleted from this paper, as allowed by the IMF's publication policy.

Summary

This paper reviews the fiscal implications of climate change, and the potential role of the Fund in addressing them. It stresses that:

• The potential fiscal implications are immediate as well as lasting, and liable to affect—in differing forms and degree—all Fund members.

• Climate change is a global externality problem, calling for some degree of international fiscal cooperation…

• …and has features—an intertemporal mismatch between the (early) costs of action to address climate change and (later) benefits, pervasive uncertainties and irreversibilities (including risk of catastrophe), and sharp asymmetries in the effects on different countries—that raise difficult technical and ethical issues, and hinder policy coordination.

• In addition to itself impacting the public finances, climate change calls for deploying fiscal instruments to mitigate its extent and adapt to its remaining effects.

Subject: Fiscal reforms, Fiscal stability, Oil production, Oil revenues, Public finance

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