17 August 2023

New Study: America's wealthiest 10% responsible for 40% of US greenhouse gas emissions \ UMass Amherst

A new study, led by the University of Massachusetts Amherst, reveals that the wealthiest Americans, those whose income places them in the top 10% of earners, are responsible for 40% of the nation's total greenhouse gas emissions. The study, published in PLOS Climate, is the first to link income, especially income derived from financial investments, to the emissions used in generating that income.

Study reveals America's wealthiest 10% responsible for 40% of US greenhouse gas emissions

America's wealthiest 10% responsible for 40% of US greenhouse gas emissions
The wealthiest 10% of Americans are responsible for 40% of the nation’s total greenhouse gas emissions.

". . .The authors suggest that policymakers adopt taxes focused on shareholders and the carbon intensity of investment incomes in order to equitably meet the goal of keeping the global temperature to 1.5° C of warming.

Scientists and environmentalists have long known that consumption—the amount and kind of food we eat, the vehicles we drive and all the stuff we buy—is closely linked to . Traditional environmental policy has then sought to either limit consumption or guide it into more environmentally friendly avenues: replacing red meat with plant-based diets or swapping a gas-guzzler for an electric vehicle.
"But, consumption-based approaches to limiting greenhouse gas emissions are regressive. They disproportionately punish the poor while having little impact on the extremely wealthy, who tend to save and invest a large share of their ," says Jared Starr, a sustainability scientist at UMass Amherst and the lead author of the new study.
"Consumption-based approaches miss something important: carbon pollution generates income, but when that income is reinvested into stocks, rather than spent on necessities, it isn't subject to a consumption-based carbon tax."
"What happens, when we focus on how emissions create income, rather than how they enable consumption?" Starr asks.

An answer to that seemingly simple question, however, is fraught with difficulty, because though it's relatively easy to capture a snapshot of wages and salaries—the main sources of income for 90% of Americans—it has been very difficult to get a sense of the investment income that makes up a large source of the richest Americans' wealth.

To solve this problem, Starr and his colleagues looked at 30 years' worth of data, drawing first on a database containing over 2.8 billion inter-sectoral financial transfers and following the flow of carbon and income through these transactions. This allowed them to calculate two different values: supplier-based and producer-based  of income.
Supplier-based emissions are those created by industries that supply  to the economy. For instance, the operational emissions released by fossil fuel companies are actually quite low, but they make enormous profits by selling oil to others who will burn it.
America's wealthiest 10% responsible for 40% of US greenhouse gas emissions
Mean household tons of CO2 equivalent emissions (2019) per income group under the pre-tax supplier framework. The width of each income group, on the x-axis, corresponds with each group’s share of national emissions. Credit: Jared Starr

Producer-based emissions are those directly released by the operation of the business itself—like a coal-fired power plant.

  • With these two figures in hand, Starr and his co-authors then linked their emissions data with another database containing detailed demographic and income data for over 5 million Americans. 
  • This database parses out income sources differentiating active income—the wages or salaries earned through employment—from the passively generated investment income.
Not only did the team find that over 40% of U.S. emissions were attributable with the income flows of the top 10%, they also discovered that the top 1% of earners alone generate 15—17% of the nation's emissions.
  •  In general, white, non-Hispanic households had the highest emission-linked income and Black households the lowest. Emissions tended to increase with age, peaking with the 45–54 age group, before declining.
The team also identified "super emitters" with extremely high emissions intensity. 
  • These are almost exclusively among the top 0.1% of households, which are overrepresented in the fields of finance, real estate and insurance, manufacturing, and mining and quarrying.
"This research gives us insight into the way that income and investments obscure emissions responsibility," says Starr. "For example, 15 days of income for a top 0.1% household generates as much carbon pollution as a lifetime of income for a household in the bottom 10%. An income-based lens helps us focus in on exactly who is profiting the most from climate-changing carbon pollution, and design policies to shift their behavior."
In particular, Starr and his colleagues point to income and shareholder-based taxation—rather than taxing consumables.
"In this way we could really incentivize the Americans who are driving and profiting the most from climate change to decarbonize their industries and investments. It's divestment through self-interest, rather than altruism. Imagine how quickly  and large shareholders would decarbonize their industries if we made it in their financial interest to do so. The tax revenue gained could help the nation invest substantially in decarbonization efforts," says Starr.

More information: Income-based U.S. household carbon footprints (1990–2019) offer new insights on emissions inequality and climate finance, PLOS Climate (2023). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pclm.0000190


Explore further

Carbon taxes that focus on luxury consumption are fairer than those that tax all emissions equally: Study
__________________________________________________________________________
America's Wealthiest 10% Responsible for 40% of US Greenhouse Gas Emissions  : UMass Amherst
Greenhouse gas emissions - Wikipedia
Income of Richest 10% Creates 40% of US Emissions, New Study Finds
The Huge Carbon Footprint of Billionaires - Impakter


They found the wealthiest 10% in the US, households making more than about $178,000, were responsible for 40% of the nation's human-caused, planet-heating pollution. The income of the top 1% alone – households making more than $550,000 – was linked to 15% to 17% of this pollution.1 hour ago
1 hour ago — UMass sustainability scientist Jared Starr's new study, the first to link emissions to U.S. household income, finds that investment is the ...
17 minutes ago — Income for the wealthiest 10% of Americans generates over 40% of the country's emissions of greenhouse gases, a new analysis found.
1 hour ago — Americans who are in the top 10% of earners are responsible for 40% of the country's total greenhouse gas emissions, a study published ...
1 hour ago — A new study published Thursday in the journal PLOS Climate found the wealthiest 10% of Americans are responsible for almost half of ...
42 minutes ago — The wealthiest 10% of Americans are responsible for 40% of the nation's total greenhouse gas emissions. (IMAGE). University of Massachusetts Amherst.
1 hour ago — new study has found that America's wealthiest 10% are responsible for 40% of the country's greenhouse gas emissions.
8 hours ago — Study reveals America's wealthiest 10% responsible for 40% of US greenhouse gas emissions. A new study, led by the University of ...
1 hour ago — US carbon pollution by income level. The wealthiest 0.1% of Americans have the highest greenhouse gas emissions, but their emissions linked ...

No comments:

Sunset Market -- Mesa Farmer's Market: A Missed Opportunity for ARTISANAL HOME GOODS...Past Thursday September 19, 2024

The Kitchen Witch AZ Here was the enticing advert for  https://downtownmesa.com/events/sunset-market Sunset Market After you call it a day, ...