HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series
HKS Working Paper No. RWP15-046
August 2015
Abstract
The pollution haven hypothesis suggests that unilateral domestic climate change mitigation
policy would impose significant economic costs on carbon-intensive industries, resulting in
declining output and increasing net imports. In order to evaluate this hypothesis, we undertake a
two-step empirical analysis. First, we use historic energy prices as a proxy for climate change
mitigation policy. We estimate how production and net imports change in response to energy
prices using a 35-year panel of approximately 450 U.S. manufacturing industries. Second, we
take these estimated relationships and use them to simulate the impacts of changes in energy
prices resulting from a domestic climate change mitigation policy that effectively imposes a $15
per ton carbon price. We find that energy-intensive manufacturing industries are more likely to
experience decreases in production and increases in net imports than less-intensive industries.
Our best estimate is that competitiveness effects – measured by the increase in net imports – are
as large as 0.8 percent for the most energy-intensive industries and represent no more than about
one-sixth of the estimated decrease in production under a $15 per ton carbon price.
Citation
Aldy, Joseph E., and William A. Pizer. "The Competitiveness Impacts of Climate Change Mitigation Policies." HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series RWP15-046, August 2015.