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Initial Ph. D. proposal Economic assessment of Kyoto Protocol Name:不羁的二 Introduction One of the most encouraging historical events of the current century might be the increasing awareness of the environmental issue, notably the climate change. The GDP growth of developing countries such as India and China is intensively driven by unsustainable consumption of nature resources. Solving poverty, at least in the short run, seems to be met by more coal-fire power plants, which are rapidly turning these countries into major green house gas (GHG) emitters. Cutting the emissions of GHGs is highly costly in terms of GDP growth. Apart from that, developing countries argue it is unfair for them, as emerging markets to pay the bills left by developed countries who “contributed” to the damage of the ecosystem for 150 years of industrial activity. It is agreed that the solution of environmental issue cannot rely on the restriction of morality. Unless developed countries at least partially subside the potential cost of GHGs emission reduction in developing countries, there is no incentive for poor countries to commit to environmental agreements. However, developed countries refuse to do so. From the game theory point of view, individual’s reluctance to contribute to environmental protection is the tragedy of public goods. Kyoto Protocol, helping in building trust and credibility among nations, enables the whole system to reach a more optimal outcome. The world is now attempting to establish mechanisms to enable nations collectively to respond to the continuing environmental crisis. Such mechanisms, known as international institutions or regimes, performed various tasks to help nations overcome the obstacles which lay in the path of cooperation. Kyoto Protocol was adopted in Kyoto in 1997 and entered into force in 2005. It is an international agreement linked to the United Nations Framework Convention on Initial Ph. D. proposal Economic assessment of Kyoto Protocol Name:不羁的二 Climate Change. Recognizing that developed countries are principally responsible for the current high level of GHGs emissions in the atmosphere, the Kyoto Protocol burdens a heavier responsibility on industrialized countries according to the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities. The major characteristic of the Kyoto Protocol is that it establishes binding targets for 37 industrialized countries and EU-15 for reducing GHG emissions. These amounts are supposed to reduce to an average of five percent against 1990 levels over the five-year period 2008-2012. The essential purpose of the Kyoto Protocol is to establish a carbon market to serve as the market mechanism to finally solve the problem of GHGs emission reduction as a public good. From 7-18 December this year, negotiators from all over the world will meet in Copenhagen to forge the post-Kyoto climate regime. The whole world is waiting for the results. Kyoto Protocol is a long way to go, however, a way full of hope and discovery, which makes the research of the Protocol a passionate one. Indeed, it is the first time when the market mechanisms are being seriously considered to get adopted to the environmental issues creating the great milestone and hope for success. Subject In the following study we would like to assess the impact of Kyoto protocol over past 5-10 years using several groups of countries—countries committing to GHGs emissions reduction, countries ratifying Kyoto Protocol but without commitment, and the rest of the world. The question of long term effects of this policy on GHGs emissions, international trade, GDP and poverty is still open. This research will analyze the current situation regarding these indicators comparing different groups of countries to assess the impact of Kyoto Protocol. Initial Ph. D. proposal Economic assessment of Kyoto Protocol Name:不羁的二 Research Questions Initially, the research will try to verify the following questions using comparative study of the selected countries: How large is the impact of Kyoto Protocol on GHGs emissions? How large is the impact of Kyoto Protocol on macroeconomic performance (pattern of trade, GDP, GDP per capital, etc)? How does Kyoto Protocol influence differently among developed countries and developing countries? (Do developing countries undergo more cost than industrialized ones by committing to GHGs emissions reduction?) By clarifying above questions, the research will seek the long term true relationship between the state of the ecosystem and macroeconomic performance— 1. How much is the health cost of pollution and how that can be translated into productivity loss? 2. To which extent can environmental agreements correct the loss? 3. To which extent can global environmental governance solve the tragedy of environmental protection as a public good. The above three questions will be the objectives of the research at the later stage. The first question reflects the role economists play in translating the damage of environment in terms of economic indicator, thus building the bridge between nature scientists and politicians. Based on the first question, the second question provides the final answer to the assessment of environmental agreements. The third question, viewing from a height, touches the core of environmental issue—the role of global environmental governance. Initial Ph. D. proposal Economic assessment of Kyoto Protocol Name:不羁的二 Methodological framework and scope The general reflections on the impact of the green policies on the economy are our first basis of inspiration. It is followed by the environmental economics and technical econometric papers related to the subject. Although so far, Kyoto Protocol has not succeeded in the sense of establishing the market mechanism of carbon trade, one can try to assess the impact of Kyoto Protocol over the past 10 years. The evaluation of Kyoto Protocol contains various aspects. On the one hand, it sets the difficulties one faces in evaluating the Protocol. On the other hand, it brings diversity into the research. Kyoto Protocol is unique among international treaties in that its legitimacy is based on a chain of scientific and socio-economic hypothesis. These hypotheses and interconnectedness are the true beauty of the quantitative research of the Protocol. As for the estimation methods, they generally include simple OLS estimation, panel data estimations with fixed and random effects, Tobit estimation, or semi-parametric estimation. As the development of the research, a suitable and concrete methodology regarding the topic will be formed. Theoretical framework The initial findings of World Bank (1992) and Grossman (1995) have dominated the research regarding the empirical relationship between economic growth and environmental pollution over the decade. A common methodology adopted is the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC). The basic idea of EKC is the inverted U-shaped relationship between levels of pollution and GDP per capita. The foundation of EKC is Initial Ph. D. proposal Economic assessment of Kyoto Protocol Name:不羁的二 the dynamic or static optimal growth model with environmental variables such as flow pollution and abatement taken into account. By adopting empirical methods, research such as World Bank (1992), Grossman and Krueger (1993, 1995) and Selden and Song (1994) verify the existence of U-shaped curve between pollutants and economic growth—positive relationship (emissions increase as GDP increases) before the turning point and negative (emissions decline as GDP increases) afterwards. After this finding, the trend goes to two directions—theoretical explanation of EKC and empirical analysis. As for the relationship between environmental regulations, Jorgenson and Wilcoxen (1990, 1993) confirms a negative relationship between GDP growth and environmental regulations, by simulating the U.S. economy with and without environmental regulations using an intertemporal general equilibrium model. However, the empirical studies about Kyoto Protocol are relatively immature, lacking the theoretical support and empirical analysis. Yet that is what makes associated studies very meaningful. Moreover, we believe that the subject of adoption of Kyoto protocol and environmental economics in general, cannot be seen without particular attention paid to the social consequences of the described issues. A deeper insight into the issue with multi disciplines taken into account is extremely important for the research. Bibliography: Grossman, G.M., Krueger, A.B. (1995). “Economic growth and the environment”. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 110, 353-377 IPCC (1996), Climate Change 1995: Economic and Social Dimensions of Climate Change, Contribution of Working Group III to the Second Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Cambridge. Initial Ph. D. proposal Economic assessment of Kyoto Protocol Name:不羁的二 Jorgenson, D.W., Wilcoxen, P.J. (1990). “Environmental regulation and the U.S. economic growth”, Rand Journal of Economics 21, 314-340. Romer, D. (1996). Advanced Macroeconomics. McGraw-Hill, New York. Solow, R.M. (1956). “A contribution to the theory of economic growth”. Quarterly Journal of Economics 70,65–94. Solow, R. (1974a). “Intergenerational equity and exhaustible resources”. In: Review of Economic Studies, Symposium on the Economics of Exhaustible Resources, pp. 29–45. Solow, R. (1974b). “The economics of resources or the resources of economics”. American Economic Review 64, 1–14. UNFCCC (1997), Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), FCCC/CP/1997/L.7/Add.1, Bonn. UNFCCC (1998), Review of the Implementation of Commitments and of other Provisions of the Convention. Activities Implemented Jointly: Review of Progress under the Pilot Phase (Decision 5/CP.1), Second Synthesis Report on Activities Implemented, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), FCCC/CP/1998/2,Bonn. US Administration (1998), The Kyoto Protocol and the President’s Policies to Address Climate Change: Administration Economic Analysis, Washington, DC. World Bank (1992). World Development Report 1992: Development and the Environment. Oxford University Press, New York.