American Energy Alliance

A Grand Carbon Bargain?

The policy du jour within the center-right and neoliberal ivory towers is the carbon tax. Economics brand names like Janet Yellen, Richard Thaler, and Larry Summers took to the pages of the Wall Street Journal recently to inform us that a carbon tax of their design can be a bipartisan winner in these factious times.

The so-called “Economists’ Statement” is a five-pillar proposal that they think will transcend the partisan divide by taxing carbon-based fuels while simultaneously mitigating the well-known regressive effect of energy taxes with a “dividend” and removing burdensome, top-down regulations. The economic flaws with a tax-and-dividend arrangement are documented extensively in the October 2018 study, “The Carbon Tax: Analysis of Six Potential Scenarios.”

But promises of regulatory relief do not stand up to scrutiny either. The problem is that no one to Yellen, Thaler, and Summers’ political left agrees that regulatory red tape should be cut.

The third pillar of the plan expressed in the Wall Street Journal reads, “A sufficiently robust and gradually rising carbon tax will replace the need for various carbon regulations that are less efficient. Substituting a price signal for cumbersome regulations will promote economic growth and provide the regulatory certainty companies need for long- term investment in clean-energy alternatives.”  But simply by reading the last five years’ worth of commentary from the environmentalist left, we should recognize that the promised compromise prioritizing economic efficiency has a snowball’s chance on the Senate floor of surviving intact.

To state what the left’s body of work makes obvious: A carbon tax only appeals to that faction in conjunction with a wide range of other carbon-mitigation strategies. A carbon tax that will draw left wing support isn’t a tax-for-regulation swap, but a complement to existing and accelerated regulation. As the ascendent “Green New Deal” shows, a standalone carbon tax has no currency with the party that now holds a majority in the House of Representatives.

Below you’ll find a sampling of the environmental left’s perspective on the carbon tax and I think you’ll realize, as I have, that the ‘Economists’ Plan’ is a nonstarter.

Alluring though it may be to former Federal Reserve chairs and academic economists, a carbon tax that replaces regulatory fiat fails to satisfy the appetite for control that motivates the environmental activist class. The promised compromise is out-of-touch and unrealistic; those of us being asked to agree to it ought regard it as such.

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