The Carbon Bubble: climate policy in a fire-sale model of deleveraging∗

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Abstract

Credible implementation of climate change policy, consistent with the 2 °C limit, requires a large proportion of current fossil-fuel reserves to remain unused. This issue, named the Carbon Bubble, is usually presented as a required asset write-off, with implications for investors. We embed the Carbon Bubble in a macroeconomic model exhibiting a financial accelerator: if investors are leveraged, then the Carbon Bubble might precipitate a fire-sale of assets across the economy, and generate a large and persistent fall in output and investment, impairing the economy's ability to invest in the zero carbon assets it needs to produce output in the post-climate-transition world. We find a role for macroeconomic policy protecting investors' balance sheets in mitigating the macroeconomic effects of the Carbon Bubble, and enhancing welfare.

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Comerford, D., & Spiganti, A. (2023). The Carbon Bubble: climate policy in a fire-sale model of deleveraging∗. Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 125(3), 655–687. https://doi.org/10.1111/sjoe.12519

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