000 01804nab a2200337 c 4500
999 _c142349
_d142349
003 ES-MaIEF
005 20200817120822.0
007 ta
008 200817t2020 us ||||| |||| 00| 0|eng d
040 _aES-MaIEF
_bspa
_cES-MaIEF
041 _aeng
100 1 _968122
_aGanapati, Sharat
245 _aEnergy cost pass-through in US manufacturing
_bestimates and implications for carbon taxes
_c by Sharat Ganapati, Joseph S. Shapiro and Reed Walker
260 _c2020
500 _aDisponible también en formato electrónico.
500 _aResumen.
504 _aBibliografía.
520 _aWe study how changes in energy input costs for US manufacturers affect the relative welfare of manufacturing producers and consumers (i.e., incidence). We also develop a methodology to estimate the incidence of input taxes that accounts for incomplete pass-through, imperfect competition, and substitution among inputs. For the several industries we study, 70 percent of energy price-driven changes in input costs get passed through to consumers in the short to medium run. The share of the welfare cost that consumers bear is 25–75 percent smaller (and the share producers bear is larger) than models featuring complete pass-through and perfect competition would suggest.
650 4 _943612
_aENERGIA
650 4 _941427
_aCOSTOS
650 4 _933524
_aCARBON
650 _aIMPUESTOS
_947460
650 4 _946552
_aINCIDENCIA Y TRASLACION
650 4 _947674
_aMANUFACTURAS
650 4 _aINDUSTRIA
_947463
650 4 _aESTADOS UNIDOS
_942888
700 1 _968123
_aShapiro, Joseph S.
700 1 _956742
_aWalker, William Reed
773 0 _9162354
_oOP 2134/2020/2
_tAmerican Economic Journal : Applied Economics
_w(IEF)82246
_x 1945-7782
_gv. 12, n. 2, April 2020, p.303-342
942 _cART