Relations (1)

related 2.58 — strongly supporting 5 facts

The concept 'carbon tax' is a central policy instrument analyzed in the study 'Designing Carbon Pricing Policies Across the Globe', which uses the term to identify relevant experts [1], evaluates expert recommendations regarding its implementation {fact:2, fact:4}, and compares it against cap-and-trade schemes {fact:3, fact:5}.

Facts (5)

Sources
Designing Carbon Pricing Policies Across the Globe link.springer.com Springer 5 facts
procedureThe authors of 'Designing Carbon Pricing Policies Across the Globe' reweight recommendations on carbon taxes, cap-and-trade, Border Carbon Adjustments (BCA), and revenue use options by the characteristics of both respondents and non-respondents to test for non-response bias.
claimThe authors of 'Designing Carbon Pricing Policies Across the Globe' suggest that cross-country heterogeneity in recommendations for carbon taxes versus cap-and-trade schemes may indicate that policy-makers lack clear-cut guidance, potentially stalling progress on carbon pricing.
procedureThe authors of 'Designing Carbon Pricing Policies Across the Globe' identified potential experts on carbon pricing by running an automated keyword search in SCOPUS for authors of at least two publications since 2000 that have been cited at least once, using terms such as 'carbon tax' and 'cap-and-trade,' and filtering for those with a workable email address.
claimThe survey conducted in 'Designing Carbon Pricing Policies Across the Globe' deliberately excluded sub-level implementation questions, such as whether a carbon price is applied to households or industrial firms, to maintain a succinct comparison between carbon tax and cap-and-trade schemes.
claimThe study 'Designing Carbon Pricing Policies Across the Globe' documents strong support among academic experts for the use of carbon taxes and border carbon adjustment as climate policy instruments.