Discussion paper

DP19764 Consumer Durables, Monetary Policy, and the Green Transition

As part of the green transition, the European cap-and-trade scheme for CO2 emissions will be extended to cover consumer durables. We propose a New Keynesian model that features both, "brown" and "green" durable goods and show that if monetary policy follows a business-as-usual approach, the green transition will be inflationary, with headline inflation increasing by about 20 basis points over a four-year transition period. Monetary policy faces a tradeoff: pursuing a strict inflation target slows the green transition because green durable purchases are especially sensitive to interest rates. We quantify this tradeoff as we contrast headline and core-inflation targeting.

£6.00
Citation

Dietrich, A, L Leitenbacher and G Müller (2024), ‘DP19764 Consumer Durables, Monetary Policy, and the Green Transition‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 19764. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp19764