Home Business & Economics 10. Updating the Allocation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Permits in a Federal Cap- and- Trade Program
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

10. Updating the Allocation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Permits in a Federal Cap- and- Trade Program

  • Meredith Fowlie
View more publications by University of Chicago Press
© 2019 University of Chicago Press

© 2019 University of Chicago Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. National Bureau of Economic Research v
  3. Relation of the Directors to the Work and Publications of the National Bureau of Economic Research vi
  4. Contents vii
  5. Acknowledgments xi
  6. Introduction and Summary 1
  7. I. Climate Policy in the Broader Context
  8. 1. Distributional Impacts in a Comprehensive Climate Policy Package 21
  9. 2. Climate Policy and Labor Markets 37
  10. 3. Limiting Emissions and Trade: Some Basic Ideas 53
  11. 4. Regulatory Choice with Pollution and Innovation 65
  12. 5. Spillovers from Climate Policy to Other Pollutants 79
  13. 6. Markets for Anthropogenic Carbon within the Larger Carbon Cycle 93
  14. II. Interactions with Other Policies
  15. 7. Interactions between State and Federal Climate Change Policies 109
  16. 8. Belts and Suspenders: Interactions among Climate Policy Regulations 127
  17. 9. Climate Policy and Voluntary Initiatives: An Evaluation of the Connecticut Clean Energy Communities Program 145
  18. 10. Updating the Allocation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions Permits in a Federal Cap- and- Trade Program 157
  19. III. Design Features of Climate Policy
  20. 11. Upstream versus Downstream Implementation of Climate Policy 179
  21. 12. The Economics of Carbon Offsets 197
  22. 13. Monitoring and Enforcement of Climate Policy 213
  23. 14. How Can Policy Encourage Economically Sensible Climate Adaptation? 229
  24. 15. Setting the Initial Time-Profile of Climate Policy: The Economics of Environmental Policy Phase- Ins 245
  25. IV. Sector-Specific Issues
  26. 16. Urban Policy Effects on Carbon Mitigation 259
  27. 17. Is Agricultural Production Becoming More or Less Sensitive to Extreme Heat? Evidence from US Corn and Soybean Yields 271
  28. 18. Carbon Prices and Automobile Greenhouse Gas Emissions: The Extensive and Intensive Margins 287
  29. 19. Evaluating the Slow Adoption of Energy Efficient Investments: Are Renters Less Likely to Have Energy Efficient Appliances? 301
  30. Contributors 319
  31. Author Index 323
  32. Subject Index 327
Downloaded on 30.12.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7208/9780226921983-014/html
Scroll to top button