Working Paper

Green Paradox and Directed Technical Change: The Effect of Subsidies to Clean R&D

Julien Daubanes, André Grimaud, Luc Rougé
CESifo, Munich, 2013

CESifo Working Paper No. 4334

We borrow standard assumptions from the non-renewable-resource-taxation and from the directed-technical-change literatures, to take a full account of the incentives to perform R&D activities in a dirty-resource sector and in a clean-resource-substitute sector. We show that a gradual rise in the subsidies to clean R&D activities causes a less rapid resource extraction, because it enhances the long-run resource productivity. Our result contradicts the green-paradox conjecture that technical improvements in resource substitutes accelerate resource extraction. Sector-specific innovation activities are tantamount to competing economic projects; general equilibrium with several R&D sectors implies no-arbitrage conditions that give rise to not-so-intuitive results.

CESifo Category
Resources and Environment
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Keywords: non-renewable resources, directed technical change, green paradox, environmental policy, R&D subsidies
JEL Classification: Q320, O320, O410