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Social sustainability in the decarbonized welfare state: Social policy as a buffer against poverty related to environmental taxes
[journal article]
Abstract Decarbonization, environmental protection, and sustainable development are more topical than ever. Despite long-standing debates about the regressive profile of environmental taxes, the welfare state’s role in buffering adverse distributive impacts of climate policy is largely unexplored. We examine... view more
Decarbonization, environmental protection, and sustainable development are more topical than ever. Despite long-standing debates about the regressive profile of environmental taxes, the welfare state’s role in buffering adverse distributive impacts of climate policy is largely unexplored. We examine if social policy shields households from falling into poverty due to environmental taxes tied to consumption. We specifically focus on the importance of income replacement in social insurance and social assistance. To enable detailed assessments of the distributive outcomes of environmental policy, we impute environmental taxes into the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC). Our comparative analysis of 26 European countries indicates that the welfare state protects households from relative income poverty due to environmental taxes. Moreover, comparisons between educational groups suggest that both social insurance and social assistance play different yet complementary roles in reducing socio-economic gradients in poverty related to environmental taxes.... view less
Keywords
sustainability; welfare state; environmental policy; poverty; quantity; social policy; taxation; social insurance; social assistance; EU
Classification
Ecology, Environment
Social Policy
Free Keywords
comparative; de-carbonization; EU-SILC 2015
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 1-28
Journal
Global Social Policy (2023) OnlineFirst
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/14680181231217659
ISSN
1741-2803
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed