Grenzausgleich für die EU-Klimapolitik: Optionen und ihre ökonomischen Wirkungen
Abstract
The EU’s unilateral carbon pricing requires effective border adjustment to prevent carbon leakage and protect industrial competitiveness. Using a computable general equilibrium trade model calibrated to 141 countries and 65 sectors, we compare three border adjustment designs against a no-adjustment baseline: the current EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), a Leakage Border Adjustment Mechanism (LBAM), and a Climate Contribution. All designs outperform no adjustment, yet none dominates across all dimensions. The EU-CBAM incentivises foreign decarbonisation but disadvantages downstream industries; the LBAM prevents leakage broadly with low bureaucracy; the Climate Contribution offers administrative simplicity but burdens consumers.
© 2026 Gabriel Felbermayr, Friedrich Lührs, Hendrik Mahlkow, Johannes Müller, Isabel Pham, Robin Sogalla, Joschka Wanner, published by ZBW – Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.