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Journal Article

Trade and the environment, trade policies and environmental policies—How do they interact?

Authors

  • Felbermayr
  • G.
  • Peterson
  • S.
  • Wanner
  • J.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1111/joes.12628

JEL Classification

F13 F18 Q54 Q58

Key Words

carbon border adjustment

carbon leakage

climate change

trade

trade policy

Related Topics

International Trade

Climate

While international trade can offer gains from specialization and access to a wider range of products, it is also closely interlinked with global environmental problems, above all, anthropogenic climate change. This survey provides a structured overview of the economic literature on the interaction between environmental outcomes, trade, environmental policy and trade policy. In this endeavor, it covers approaches reaching from descriptive data analysis based on input-output tables, over quantitative trade models and econometric studies to game-theoretic analyses. Addressed issues are in particular the emission content of trade and emissions along value chains, the relocation of dirty firms and environmental impacts abroad, impacts of specific trade policies (such as trade agreements or tariffs) or environmental policies (such as border carbon adjustment), transportation emissions, as well as the role of firms. Across the different topics covered, the paper also tries to identify avenues for future research, with a particular focus on extending quantitative trade and environment models.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Prof. Dr. Gabriel Felbermayr
    Kiel Institute Fellow
  • Prof. Dr. Joschka Wanner
    Kiel Institute Researcher
  • Prof. Dr. Sonja Peterson
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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    War against Ukraine

Research Center

  • Global Transformation

  • Trade