Research project Political and distributive consequences of the de-carbonized welfare state

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Many environmental policies currently being enacted to slow climate change have distributive – and thereby political implications. Policy instruments such as carbon taxes and fees tend to be regressive, as they weigh more heavily on the poor who spend a larger share of their budgets on energy. Without a redistributive social agenda, countries may be caught in a vicious cycle of green policy adjustments, increased inequalities, and an erosion of political support.
We develop a new methodology for estimating individual-level distributional effects of environmental policies in countries with different social policy systems, and a novel analytical approach for estimating the effects on political support using a combination of policy and poll-of-polls data.