Working Paper

Public Policies and Long-Run Growth in a Model with Environmental Degradation

Luigi Bonatti, Lorenza Alexandra Lorenzetti
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9539

We study how public policies affects an economy where production emits pollutants and investment in productive assets raises the economy’s overall productivity. We explore two hypotheses about how the accumulation of pollutants affects human well-being. Under the first one, there is no limit to the possibility for households to defend themselves against environmental degradation by increasing the use of manmade artifacts, while under the second one there is a threshold beyond which the effects of the accumulation of pollutants cannot be offset by devoting more output to this scope. Under both hypotheses, we compare the laissez-faire (LF) to the socially optimal (SO) path. Then, we check whether the latter can be decentralized by using the policy instruments available to the government. Under the first hypothesis, GDP and pollutants grow slower along the SO balanced growth path (BGP) than along the LF BGP, while people’s well-being is greater along the former. Therefore, green policies driving the economy along its OP tend to reduce GDP growth. Under the second hypothesis, LF may lead to a “climate catastrophe” by determining unbounded growth, which—without incentives to invest in green technology—drives the amount of pollutants beyond its maximum compatible with life on earth.

CESifo Category
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Resources and Environment
Keywords: endogenous growth, green policies, global warming, externalities, human well being, climate catastrophe, defensive expenditures
JEL Classification: H230, O440, Q540, Q580