I’m not a big fan of the International Monetary Fund for the simple reason that the international bureaucracy undermines global prosperity by pushing for higher taxes, while also exacerbating moral hazard by providing bailouts to rich investors who foolishly lend money to dodgy and corrupt governments.
Six years ago, I complained that the bureaucrats wanted a giant energy tax, which would have diverted more than $5,000 from an average family’s budget.
That didn’t go anywhere, but the IMF hasn’t given up. Indeed, they’re now floating a new proposal for an enormous global energy tax.
To give credit to the IMF, the bureaucrats don’t mince words or disguise their agenda. The openly stated goal is to impose a giant tax increase.
Domestic policies are thus needed to give people and businesses greater incentives (through pricing or other means) to reduce emissions…international cooperation is key to ensure that all countries do their part.
…The shift from fossil fuels will not only transform economic production processes, it will also profoundly change the lives of many people and communities. …Carbon taxes—charges on the carbon content of fossil fuels—and similar arrangements to increase the price of carbon, are the single most powerful and efficient tool… Even so, the global average carbon price is $2 a ton… To illustrate the extra effort needed by each country…, three scenarios are considered, with tax rates of $25, $50, and $75 a ton of CO2 in 2030.
The IMF asserts that the tax should be $75 per ton. At least based on alarmist predictions about climate warming.
What would that mean?
Under carbon taxation on a scale needed…, the price of essential items in household budgets, such as electricity and gasoline, would rise considerably… With a $75 a ton carbon tax, coal prices would typically rise by more than 200 percent above baseline levels in 2030… The price of natural gas…would also rise significantly, by 70 percent on average…carbon taxes would undoubtedly add to the cost of living for all households… In most countries, one-third to one-half of the burden of increased energy prices on households comes indirectly through higher general prices for consumer products.
Here’s a table from the publication showing how various prices would increase.
The bureaucrats recognize that huge tax increases on energy will lead to opposition (remember the Yellow Vest protests in France?).
So the article proposes various ways of using the revenues from a carbon tax, in hopes of creating constituencies that will support the tax.
Here’s the table from the report that outlines the various options.
To be fair, the microeconomic analysis for the various options is reasonably sound.
And if the bureaucrats embraced a complete revenue swap, meaning no net increase in money for politicians, there might be a basis for compromise.
However, it seems clear that the IMF favors a big energy tax combined with universal handouts (i.e., something akin to a “basic income“).
A political consideration in favor of combining carbon taxation with equal dividends is that such an approach creates a large constituency in favor of enacting and keeping the plan (because about 40 percent of the population gains, and those gains rise if the carbon price increases over time).
And other supporters of carbon taxes also want to use the revenue to finance a bigger burden of government.
Last but not least, it’s worth noting that the IMF wants to get poor nations to participate in this scheme by offering more foreign aid. That may be good for the bank accounts of corrupt politicians, but it won’t be good news for those countries.
And rich nations would be threatened with protectionism.
Turning an international carbon price floor into reality would require agreement among participants…participation in the agreement among emerging market economies might be encouraged through side payments, technology transfers…nonparticipants could be coerced into joining the agreement through trade sanctions…or border carbon adjustments (levying charges on the unpriced carbon emissions embodied in imports from nonparticipant countries to match the domestic carbon tax).
I’m amused, by the way, that the IMF has a creative euphemism (“border carbon adjustments”) for protectionism. I’m surprised Trump doesn’t do something similar (perhaps “border wage adjustment”).
For what it’s worth, the bureaucracy criticized Trump for being a protectionist, but I guess trade taxes are okay when the IMF proposes them.
But let’s not digress. The bottom line is that a massive global energy tax is bad news, particularly since politicians will use the windfall to expand the burden of government.
P.S. Proponents sometimes claim that a carbon tax is a neutral and non-destructive form of tax. That’s inaccurate. Such levies may not do as much damage as income taxes, on a per-dollar-collected basis, but that doesn’t magically mean there’s no economic harm (the same is true for consumption taxes and payroll taxes).
[…] don’t forget the IMF is a long-time supporter of big energy […]
“50 Years of Failed Global Warming Doomsday Predictions”
BY RICK MORAN SEPTEMBER 19, 2019
https://pjmedia.com/trending/50-years-of-failed-global-warming-doomsday-predictions/
[…] While I’m usually critical of the IMF because it has a statist policy agenda, it’s not uncommon for the professional economists who work there to produce good research. […]
[…] voters) that it doesn’t lead to higher tax burdens (even though proponents of such levies, such as the International Monetary Fund, openly acknowledge that consumers will bear the […]
if radical environmentalists control the future of the world’s political and economic systems based on their interpretation of “climate change” we could be in serious trouble… hopefully these policy choices will be made by people with a profound and reality based understanding of the nature of climate change… and the effect that human activity has had on it’s natural progression…
al gore has a more radical and simplistic interpretation of events than does Dr. Peterson… it’s interesting to contrast their public statements on the matter… it’s pretty obvious what each man’s objective is…
Reblogged this on Gds44's Blog.
people are already dying from the high energy costs associated heating and cooling their homes… affordable energy is critical to human survival… when we deal with environmental extremes… it’s hard to believe… but estimates of heat related deaths in europe in 2003 are are around 30k people… most of them elderly and on fixed incomes… (some estimates go as high as 70k deaths…) these folks are unaccustomed to air conditioning… and with europe’s high energy costs… they couldn’t afford to air condition their homes anyway… and heat? The Guardian states: “over the last four winters, according to the latest official figures, nearly 120,000 people in England and Wales have died of cold weather, or factors associated with cold weather.” and the statists want to raise the costs of energy for the average household by thousands of dollars? maybe kill off another 120k elderly citizens? let people freeze to death in the winter? die of a heat stroke in the summer? and what if all of this human created climate change stuff is just plain old alarmism? is it possible to separate the politics from the science?
Professor Jordan Peterson explains why the world won’t unite to solve the complex issue of climate change:
All these noise about climate change seems to be tillage for this global tax. Politicians and billionaire “philanthropists” are investing heavily in emotional propaganda to gather support for such a profitable deal.
“This is the first time in the history of mankind that we are setting
ourselves the task of intentionally, within a defined period of time, to
change the economic development model that has been reigning for at
least 150 years, since the Industrial Revolution,”
Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of U.N.’s Framework Convention on Climate Change, 2015
Dan, truly an even handed approach to idiocy. But, prudence requires that the tax be tested on a few nations to see if it actually works! Cures must be tested before they are available to the general public, ethics require such prudence. Let’ first see how well it work in China and India. If it works well for them, only then should it be considered for a broader roll out.