
handle: 10419/237712 , 11577/3471985
AbstractWe study the interaction between monetary/fiscal policies in a Ramsey–Sidrauski model augmented with the “Green Golden Rule.” We demonstrate conditions whereby monetary and fiscal policy under different utility and preference assumptions are or are not environmentally neutral. Despite its nonseparability in utility, we demonstrate that money is environmentally neutral. Policy impacts the environment via the marginal rate of transformation rather than the marginal rate of substitution between consumption and environment. Fiscal policies under a balanced budget are environmentally nonneutral. Only under a nonbalanced budget, when deficits are monetized, is money environmentally nonneutral. Under cash‐in‐advance and transactions costs, money is environmentally nonneutral.
ddc:330, H23, Ramsey-Sidrauski; Green Golden Rule; environmental capital; Chichilnisky et al; 's conjecture; cash in advance; transactions costs; Friedman rule, Chichilnisky et al. Conjecture, Green Golden Rule, Friedman rule, Transactions Costs, Ramsey-Sidrauski, Environmental Capital, E62, E52, Cash in Advance
ddc:330, H23, Ramsey-Sidrauski; Green Golden Rule; environmental capital; Chichilnisky et al; 's conjecture; cash in advance; transactions costs; Friedman rule, Chichilnisky et al. Conjecture, Green Golden Rule, Friedman rule, Transactions Costs, Ramsey-Sidrauski, Environmental Capital, E62, E52, Cash in Advance
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