This week, Adam Kern (San Diego; Google Scholar) reviews an article by Kimberly Clausing (UCLA), The Green Transformation and Tax Policy Criteria.
Climate change is an existential threat, and fiscal policy contains many of the tools for tackling it. But scholars of tax law have not given much attention to climate policy. (There are a few notable exceptions, including Reuven Avi-Yonah, Daniel Hemel, Mitchell Kane, Roberta Mann, Janet Milne, Tracey Roberts, Clint Wallace, and David Weisbach.) My sense is that many tax scholars shy away from climate policy because they see it as a daunting subfield that requires special technical knowledge.
In The Green Transformation and Tax Policy Criteria, Kimberly Clausing bridges this divide. She shows that traditional criteria for good tax policy—such as revenue, distribution, administrability, and efficiency—are at stake in climate policy as well.
(1) Revenue. Revenue is at stake whenever climate policy is handled through the fiscal system. Carbon taxes are potentially significant sources of revenue. In the United States, for example, Clausing estimates that even a modest carbon tax—beginning at $15 per metric ton and rising slowly to $65 per metric ton, and exempting politically sensitive goods such as gasoline and heating oil—would raise $600 billion over ten years. On the flipside, clean energy subsidies (such as those enacted in the Inflation Reduction Act) can cost hundreds of billions of dollars over a similar timeframe.
(2) Distribution. In developed countries, carbon taxes and clean-energy subsidies are often regressive. That is one important reason why climate policy should be viewed as one part of a larger fiscal system. It is a familiar move in tax policy to argue that an efficient but regressive policy should be offset with a separate adjustment to the fiscal system. This point carries over especially well to the climate context because many jurisdictions implement climate policy through their tax codes. That fact makes it more likely that that climate policy and distributive offsets can be linked, politically.
(3) Administrability. As in other domains of tax policy, administrability is crucially important but not particularly flashy. Clausing makes three recommendations that many tax scholars will quickly recognize. Policies should be targeted. They should be simple. And they should be flexible. Moreover, policies should suit the administrative capacity of the jurisdictions that must implement them. Countries with greater state capacity might be able to execute technically sound but complex policies; others with less capacity might favor a simpler approach.
(4) Efficiency. A carbon tax is (literally) the textbook example of a Pigouvian tax. Carbon emissions impose negative externalities; an obvious remedy is to internalize those externalities by means of a tax. Moreover, because climate change is a global externality, in principle, it would be ideal to coordinate on a global solution. One challenge to global coordination is that there are powerful incentives to free-ride off the contributions made by other actors: Yet another problem in climate policy that should be refreshingly familiar to tax scholars.
Within each of these criteria, there are further points of contact between climate policy and tax policy. A border adjustment is an important tool that a country can use when it enacts climate policy unilaterally; the border adjustment charges foreign firms for the carbon tax that they would have paid if they were located domestically. Clausing argues that border adjustments face a dilemma. They can either target differences in ambition—ensuring that countries with weak climate policies pay more at the border—or differences in competitive position—ensuring that firms face similar costs regardless of how their home countries implement climate policy—but not both. This result parallels other impossibility results, such as the familiar marriage tax trilemma. In both cases, policy tools that seem capable of satisfying multiple desiderata force policymakers to choose between competing objectives.
Another point of contact is the principle of targeting. Tax scholars are quite familiar with the fact that there are many possible policy instruments for redistributing resources from the rich to the poor. One of the central aims of tax policy is to identify the best instruments, given their likely effects and binding constraints. As Clausing points out, similar problems—concerning both intra-national and international distribution—are front-and-center in climate policy.
Clausing shows that climate policy and tax policy share more than just a few tools; they also share many common concerns. In climate policy, many of the key challenges are ones that tax scholars have wrestled with for decades. Tax scholars should jump into climate policy; the water is warm. And getting warmer.
Here’s the rest of this week’s SSRN Tax Roundup:
- Christina Allen (Curtin), Evaluating the Subject-to-Tax Rules (Sttr) in Nigeria: Implications, Challenges, and Strategic Considerations Amid Global Tax Reforms
- Reuven S. Avi-Yonah (Michigan), Whither The Un Framework Convention?
- Reuven S. Avi-Yonah (Michigan), Tax Delegation After Loper Bright
- John Azzi (Western Sydney), Interpreting Tax Treaties: The Importance of Post-Treaty Commentary to the OECD Model Tax Convention for Achieving Uniformity and Ensuring the Success of the New International Tax Order
- Lily L. Batchelder (NYU) et al., The Moores Lost Their Claim and Moore
- Brigham Brau (UNC) et al., Crime and the EITC
- Bryan Camp (Texas Tech), The Impact of Jarkesy on Civil Tax Fraud Penalties
- Valentin Chernyakov (Euroacademia), Prospects for Introducing Professional Income Tax in the Hellenic Republic
- Michael Dambra (Buffalo) et al., ETFs and the Wash Sale Loophole
- Maarten Floris de Wilde (Erasmus), On Pillar Two controversy and trust
- Maarten Floris de Wilde (Erasmus), Taxing Digital, What's Next?
- Charles Delmotte (Michigan State), Redistribution Without Romance, 66 Bos. Coll. L. Rev. (2024)
- Hilary G. Escajeda (Mississippi), Bad Tax Policy Breeds Bad Blood Between Songwriters and Poets
- Nir Fishbien (Michigan), Tax Expenditures and Horizontal Equity: A Present-Day Reassessment, 28 Chapman L. Rev. (2025)
- Rory Gillis (Western), Federalism and Vertical Tax Competition
- Bradford Hepfer (Texas A&M) et al., Tax Havens and Insurance Captives
- Kristin E. Hickman (Minnesota), Counterpoint: Tax Exceptionalism from Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking Procedures Is Bad Policy and Bad Law
- Islame Hosny (Columbia), The Anti-Gross-Up: Reducing the Tax Gross-Up by the Recipient's Tax Benefits
- Islame Hosny (Columbia), Tame the Tax Gross-Up's Impact on Deal Economics
- Calvin H. Johnson (Texas), How to Raise $3.5 Trillion, Without a Rate Increase
- Jagbir Singh Kadyan (Delhi), Taxation of Healthcare Sector in India
- Naman Kapoor (Independent) & Divyanshi Mehra (UPES Dehradun), Unlocking the Secrets of Electoral Bonds: Transparency, Accountability, and Democratic Integrity
- Young Ran (Christine) Kim (Cardozo), International Tax Implications for Private Equity Investments
- Kimberly S. Krieg (San Diego) & John Li (Toronto Metropolitan), Does Diverse Tax Planning Reduce Tax Risk?
- Blazej Kuzniacki (Lazarski), Determining the Beneficial Owner of Dividend Income Compared to Other Items of Income in International Taxation: nihil sub sōle novum
- Lyla Latif (Nairobi), Breaking the Cycle of Domination in Global Tax Governance: Africans Defying Asymmetries and Seizing Opportunities
- Lyla Latif (Nairobi), The Potential for Taxing Wealth in Kenya
- Lyla Latif (Nairobi), Why the U.N. Must Put AI and Data on the Tax Agenda
- Lawrence Lokken (Florida), Dividend Equivalents
- Sarah Lora (Lewis & Clark), Righting Tax Wrongs for Immigrants
- Antonio Lopo Martinez (Coimbra) et al., ESG Practices and Their Influence on Tax Litigation: An Empirical Assessment of Brazilian Firms
- Harmish Mehta (Radcliffe Chambers), Pitt v HMRC: follower notices, precedent and the "reasonable person"
- Edwin Monwan (Independent), Introduction of Windfall Tax in Nigeria: Prospect, Challenges and the Way Forward
- Hillel Nadler (Wayne State) & Kenneth Austin (American), America the Tax Haven and Its Trade Deficits
- Hillel Nadler, Cross-Border Taxation in a World of Abundant Capital
- Doron Narotzki (Akron), Tariffs: Back to the Future
- Doron Narotzki (Akron), When Debt Gets a Makeover, Taxes Follow
- Doron Narotzki (Akron) & Vered Kuperberg (Independent), Tax Rate Trouble: 15 Percent Is Too Low for Corporate America
- Doron Narotzki (Akron), Tamir Shanan (College of Management) & Noam Zamir (CityU), A New Governance Framework in Cross-Border Tax Policymaking
- João Félix Pinto Nogueira (IBFD Catholic University of Portugal, University of Cape Town) et al., Apple's Case: State aid concerning the (mis)allocation of profits to Irish PEs Opinion Statement ECJ-TF 2/2024
- Ikechukwu Nwabufo (NJIT), Analyzing the Impact on U.S. Tax Revenue from Financial Formulas in Traditional Businesses versus Startups
- Daniel Olika (Borg Research), Taxation and Human Rights: Towards a Sustainable Realisation of Minimum Core Obligations in Nigeria
- Leigh Osofsky (UNC), Wellness and The Tax Law, Georgia Law Review (forthcoming)
- Leopoldo Parada (Leeds), Flow-Through Entities and the OECD Pillar Two
- Christine Peacock (Federation), Including Imputed Rent in the GST Base
- Ted Peterson (North Texas), Preferential Local Tax Rates for Hotel and Lodging Taxes
- Pasquale Pistone et al, Taxation of Income from Cross-Border Services: A Global Normative and Enforcement Approach to Legal Issues and Policy Options
- Victoria Plekhanova (Auckland), How to Make New Zealand's Source Rules Better
- Victoria Plekhanova (Auckland), On the Irrelevance of the "Practical Man" Test to the Interpretation of New Zealand's Source Rules
- Victoria Plekhanova (Auckland), The Evolution of the Income Tax Nexus Rules in New Zealand's Statutes
- Michal Radvan (Masaryk) & Tereza Svobodová (Independent), Tax Amnesty in the Czech Republic – Cui Bono?
- Richard C. Sansing (Dartmouth) & Carolyn Levine (Delaware), Optimal Tax Avoidance and Corporate Social Responsibility with Heterogeneous Consumers and Investors
- Dina Scornos (Independent), Cloud Computing: Difficulties in Applying Current and Proposed Nexus and Profit Allocation Rules in a Cross-Border Scenario
- Tarun Sen (Jashore) & Rownok Ara (Jashore), Complexity of the Income-Tax Ordinance, 1984 – Laws of Bangladesh: Readability Assessment
- Darien Shanske (UC Davis) et al., How $1.6 Billion Vanished in Tennessee's Franchise Tax Fiasco
- Darien Shanske (UC Davis), Loper Bright, (Increased?) State Capacity, and (Perhaps?) Pyrrhic Taxpayer Victories
- Sindhura KS (Penn) et al., Estimating the impact of Value Added Tax exemptions on smartphone penetration in Colombia using the synthetic control method
- Adam B. Thimmesch (Nebraska), A Future for the State Corporate Income Tax
- Ekaterina Tibilova (Independent), The Individual Side of International Taxation: The Case of the OECD/G20 BEPS Project
- John A. Townsend (Houston), Federal Tax Procedure (2024 Practitioner Ed.)
- Carlos E. Weffe H. (Independent), Taxpayers' Rights in the Expanding Universe of Criminal and Administrative Sanctions: A Fundamental Rights Approach to Punitive Tax Law Following the OECD/G20 Base Erosion and Profit Shifting Project
- Russ Willis (Greystocke Project), Eighty-five Thirteen and All That, St. Louis Law Journal, Sept/Oct 2024
- Jack Wroldsen (Cal Poly), 1031 Offramps: Incentives for Small Investors to Sell Single-Family Rental Homes
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