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Technological change in economic models of environmental policy: a survey

Authors :
Andreas Löschel
Source :
Ecological Economics. 43:105-126
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

This paper provides an overview of the treatment of technological change in economic models of environmental policy. Numerous economic modeling studies have confirmed the sensitivity of mid- and long-run climate change mitigation cost and benefit projections to assumptions about technology costs. In general, technical progress is considered to be a non-economic, exogenous variable in global climate change modeling. However, there is overwhelming evidence that technological change is not an exogenous variable but to an important degree endogenous, induced by needs and pressures. Hence, some environment-economy models treat technological change as endogenous, responding to socio-economic variables. Three main elements in models of technological innovation are: (i) corporate investment in research and development, (ii) spillovers from R&D, and (iii) technology learning, especially learning-by-doing. The incorporation of induced technological change in different types of environmental-economic models tends to reduce the costs of environmental policy, accelerates abatement and may lead to positive spillover and negative leakage.

Details

ISSN :
09218009
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecological Economics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f20297aaad4f93122c18813609d77e17