Last April, Laurence Kotlikoff, together with three
distinguished colleagues, published a long, highly mathematical working paper
on how to make a carbon tax a “generational win-win,” that is, something that
can benefit those of us who are alive to day as well as our
great-grandchildren. Both Kotlikoff and I think the answer is “Yes,” but for
different reasons.
Earlier, I published a commentary on Kotlikoff’s working paper here
on Medium. In the meantime, he has written a shorter, much more readable
version of his “win-win” thesis for the Milken
Institute Review. The editor of MIR asked me for a comment on the
new version, which has now been published. Here is what I said:
In his Milken
Institute Review article, “Leaping the Divide,” Larry Kotlikoff
identifies a key problem of political economy that complicates efforts to slow
climate change: a large part of the costs of the transition to a low-emission
economy must be paid upfront as the economy retools, while the greatest
benefits will become apparent only decades, even centuries, down the road. That
makes costly policies like taxing emissions to spur green investment a hard
sell.
Kotlikoff would like to fix that. Somehow, he says, we need
to make a carbon tax a “generational win-win” that would “give all generations
an equal stake in the policy.” If so, we would not have to rely on the weak
reed of intergenerational altruism to build a successful political coalition
behind a climate action plan.
Can it be done? I agree with Kotlikoff that it can, but I
have serious reservations about the way he proposes to do it. Let me explain.