Working Paper

Do We Still Need Carbon-Intensive Capital When Transitioning to a Green Economy?

Wei Jin, Rick van der Ploeg, Lin Zhang
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8745

This paper presents a two-sector green endogenous growth model to explore a mechanism that explains why carbon-intensive capital is not necessarily shut down during transition to a green economy. Without accumulating clean capital to offset carbon emissions, a tightening of climate regulation leads to the running down of carbon-intensive capital. However, if climate regulations induce stepping-up of carbon-free capital to offset warming damages, the economic value of carbon-intensive capital can be protected and the running down of carbon-intensive assets can be mitigated. The use of carbon-intensive capital gives the economic means to enhance clean capital accumulation and sustain endogenous growth. Both carbon-intensive and carbon-free capital may thus be needed for an efficient transition to green growth.

CESifo Category
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Resources and Environment
Keywords: endogenous growth, green growth, two-sector growth model, climate policy
JEL Classification: Q540, Q430, Q320, O130, O440, C610