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Green Jobs and Renewable Electricity Policies: Employment Impacts of Ontario's Feed-in Tariff
59
Citations
25
References
2012
Year
Abstract Policy MakersEngineeringEnergy Efficiency PolicyEnvironmental EconomicsEnergy EconomyEnergy TaxationRenewable Electricity PoliciesEconomic AnalysisEnergy IssueRenewable Energy SystemsEnergy RegulationFeed-in Tariff PolicyEconomicsPublic PolicyEconomic PolicyEnergy LawSustainable EnergyEnergy TransitionEnergy PolicyEmployment ImpactsBusinessGreen JobsEnergy Economics
Abstract Policy makers justify renewable energy promotion policies partly on the grounds that such policies have positive employment impacts. We apply a computable general equilibrium model to assess the labour market impacts of the feed-in tariff policy used by the Government of Ontario. We find that although the policy is successful at increasing the employment in the `green' sectors of the economy, the policy is also likely to increase the rate of unemployment in the province, and to reduce overall labour force participation. We conclude that policies designed to promote renewable energy should be promoted for the sake of their environmental impacts, not for their labour market effects.
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