A Schumpeterian case can be made for boosting Green Growth in a global economic crisis. The best way to achieve this is a combination of R&D subsidies to redirect growth from polluting to clean economic activities and a credible, rising carbon tax to speed up the transition to the carbon-free era. If a carbon tax is infeasible, renewables subsidies might be a second-best alternative to reduce the duration of the fossil fuel era and curb cumulative carbon emissions despite some adverse, short-run Green Paradox effects. © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
A classroom model of global warming, fossil fuel depletion and the optimal carbon tax is formulated ...
Climate change must deal with two market failures: global warming and learning by doing in renewable...
We present a model of endogenous growth in which the use of a non-renewable resource in production y...
A Schumpeterian case can be made for boosting Green Growth in a global economic crisis. The best way...
Recent developments suggest that well-intended climate policies–including carbon taxes and subsidies...
A steeply rising carbon tax is the best way to stimulate the early switch from fossil fuel to renewa...
One of the most pressing policy challenges facing the world today concerns how to mitigate global w...
It has been proposed that climate policies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fu...
Our economic system is based on growth. However, this is at odds with our planet’s limited resources...
Since the end of World War II, the global economy has grown at a rate enabling GDP per capita to be ...
The notion of green growth has emerged as a dominant policy response to climate change and ecologica...
International audienceWe present a model of endogenous growth in which the use of a non-renewable re...
In the current context of economic crisis the level of efficiency becomes extremely important. We ne...
The global financial crisis provided an opportunity for countries to reduce their dependence on foss...
Cumulative carbon emissions and the green paradox / Frederick van der Ploeg, Oxford University, Jan....
A classroom model of global warming, fossil fuel depletion and the optimal carbon tax is formulated ...
Climate change must deal with two market failures: global warming and learning by doing in renewable...
We present a model of endogenous growth in which the use of a non-renewable resource in production y...
A Schumpeterian case can be made for boosting Green Growth in a global economic crisis. The best way...
Recent developments suggest that well-intended climate policies–including carbon taxes and subsidies...
A steeply rising carbon tax is the best way to stimulate the early switch from fossil fuel to renewa...
One of the most pressing policy challenges facing the world today concerns how to mitigate global w...
It has been proposed that climate policies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fu...
Our economic system is based on growth. However, this is at odds with our planet’s limited resources...
Since the end of World War II, the global economy has grown at a rate enabling GDP per capita to be ...
The notion of green growth has emerged as a dominant policy response to climate change and ecologica...
International audienceWe present a model of endogenous growth in which the use of a non-renewable re...
In the current context of economic crisis the level of efficiency becomes extremely important. We ne...
The global financial crisis provided an opportunity for countries to reduce their dependence on foss...
Cumulative carbon emissions and the green paradox / Frederick van der Ploeg, Oxford University, Jan....
A classroom model of global warming, fossil fuel depletion and the optimal carbon tax is formulated ...
Climate change must deal with two market failures: global warming and learning by doing in renewable...
We present a model of endogenous growth in which the use of a non-renewable resource in production y...