Firm-level supply chains to minimize unemployment and economic losses in rapid decarbonization scenarios
Abstract: Urgently needed carbon emissions reductions might lead to strict command-and-control decarbonization strategies with potentially negative economic consequences. Analysing the entire firm-level production network of a European economy, we have explored how the worst outcomes of such approaches can be avoided. We compared the systemic relevance of every firm in Hungary with its annual CO2 emissions to identify optimal emission-reducing strategies with a minimum of additional unemployment and economic losses. Setting specific reduction targets, we studied various decarbonization scenarios and quantified their economic consequences. We determined that for an emissions reduction of 20%, the most effective strategy leads to losses of about 2% of jobs and 2% of economic output. In contrast, a naive scenario targeting the largest emitters first results in 28% job losses and 33% output reduction for the same target. This demonstrates that it is possible to use firm-level production networks to design highly effective decarbonization strategies that practically preserve employment and economic output.
- W. D. Nordhaus, Revisiting the social cost of carbon, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114, 1518 (2017).
- R. S. Tol, On the optimal control of carbon dioxide emissions: an application of FUND, Environmental Modeling & Assessment 2, 151 (1997).
- C. Hope, Critical issues for the calculation of the social cost of CO2: why the estimates from PAGE09 are higher than those from PAGE2002, Climatic Change 117, 531 (2013).
- S. Fujimori, T. Masui, and Y. Matsuoka, Development of a global computable general equilibrium model coupled with detailed energy end-use technology, Applied Energy 128, 296 (2014).
- T. Ciarli and M. Savona, Modelling the Evolution of Economic Structure and Climate Change: A Review, Ecological Economics 158, 51 (2019).
- S. Hallegatte, An Adaptive Regional Input-Output Model and its Application to the Assessment of the Economic Cost of Katrina, Risk Analysis 28, 779 (2008).
- H. Inoue and Y. Todo, Firm-level propagation of shocks through supply-chain networks, Nature Sustainability 2, 841 (2019).
- W. Leontief, Environmental Repercussions and the Economic Structure: An Input-Output Approach, The Review of Economics and Statistics 52, 262 (1970).
- M. King, B. Tarbush, and A. Teytelboym, Targeted carbon tax reforms, European Economic Review 119, 526 (2019).
- A. Borsos and M. Stancsics, Unfolding the hidden structure of the Hungarian multi-layer firm network, MNB Occasional Papers, Magyar Nemzeti Bank (Central Bank of Hungary) (2020).
- M. Xu and S. Liang, Input–output networks offer new insights of economic structure, Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications 527, 121178 (2019).
- International Energy Agency, World Energy Outlook 2022 (2022a), https://www.iea.org/reports/world-energy-outlook-2022. Accessed 13 February 2023.
- S. Poledna and S. Thurner, Elimination of systemic risk in financial networks by means of a systemic risk transaction tax, Quantitative Finance 16, 1599 (2016).
- C. Diem, A. Pichler, and S. Thurner, What is the minimal systemic risk in financial exposure networks?, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 116, 103900 (2020).
- A. Pichler, S. Poledna, and S. Thurner, Systemic risk-efficient asset allocations: Minimization of systemic risk as a network optimization problem, Journal of Financial Stability 52, 100809 (2021).
- European Commission, EU ETS Handbook (2015), https://climate.ec.europa.eu/system/files/2017-03/ets_handbook_en.pdf. Accessed 13 February 2023.
- European Commission, European Union Transaction Log (2022), https://climate.ec.europa.eu/eu-action/eu-emissions-trading-system-eu-ets/union-registry_en Accessed 13 February 2023.
- J. Abrell, EUETS.INFO Track Carbon Trade in Europe (2022), https://euets.info/. Accessed 13 February 2023.
- International Energy Agency, Hungary 2022 Energy Policy Review (2022b), https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/9f137e48-13e4-4aab-b13a-dcc90adf7e38/Hungary2022.pdf. Accessed 13 February 2023.
- P. Mealy, R. M. Del Rio-Chanona, and J. D. Farmer, What You Do at Work Matters: New Lenses on Labour, SSRN Electronic Journal 10.2139/ssrn.3143064 (2018).
- M. Baudry and A. Faure, Technological progress and carbon price formation: an analysis of EU-ETS plants, FAERE Working Paper 2010.10. (2021).
- P. Wächter, The usefulness of marginal CO2-e abatement cost curves in Austria, Energy Policy 61, 1116 (2013).
- S. K. Huang, L. Kuo, and K.-L. Chou, The applicability of marginal abatement cost approach: A comprehensive review, Journal of Cleaner Production 127, 59 (2016).
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.