Working Paper

Leadership and Climate Policy

Torben K. Mideksa
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9054

This paper examines leadership in relation to supplying a global public good. Both the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement encourage the developed countries to take a lead in reducing emissions. Does a country benefit from taking a lead? When does leadership improve global welfare? The answer depends on how transparent the leader’s abatement technology is for the followers. When there is no transparency and the leader has to abate to signal the abatement cost, leadership reduces global welfare unless the crowding-out effect is weak. If there is transparency and the follower can benefit from technology spillover effects, leadership reduces global welfare unless the spillover effect is sufficiently large. I find that transparency reduces global welfare unless the spillover effect is sufficiently large and the difference in abatement cost is small. This theory can rationalize the European Union’s stance on climate policy while also explaining the perceived failure of the Kyoto Protocol.

CESifo Category
Resources and Environment
Energy and Climate Economics
Keywords: global public goods, international relations, leadership
JEL Classification: C720, D810, F500, H210, Q380, Q580