Although the case for a swift climate transition is clear, its macro-financial viability remains uncertain. To shed light on the macroeconomic and financial response to deep mitigation trajectories controlled by carbon pricing, we soft-link a process-based integrated assessment model (the World Induced Technical Change Hybrid, WITCH) to a macro-financial agent-based model (the Dystopian Schumpeter Meeting Keynes, DSK). The hybrid framework allows us to translate energy systems transformations into macro-financial outcomes at business cycle frequency. We find that rapid transitions induced by fast-growing carbon prices significantly impact unemployment, inflation, and income distribution. Stabilization policies reduce these economic fluctuations, though not completely so in Paris-compatible scenarios. Our paper emphasizes the need for coordinated climate and macroeconomic policy during decarbonization. Additionally, it showcases how model integration can lead to a better understanding of the economic implications of low-carbon futures. Rapid decarbonization driven by carbon pricing can pose macro-financial stability risks, which targeted fiscal and monetary policies can help mitigate, according to integrated assessment and agent-based modeling frameworks.
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Fierro et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8946e6c1944d70ce0565c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-026-03209-4
Luca E. Fierro
Severin Reissl
Francesco Lamperti
Communications Earth & Environment
University of Bologna
Politecnico di Milano
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
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