Climate change and inequality : evidence from the United States

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Authors

Chisadza, Carolyn
Sheng, Xin
Gupta, Rangan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

This paper examines the effects of climate change on income inequality in the United States. Computing impulse response functions (IRFs) from the local projections’ method, we empirically show that there is an immediate temporary positive response in income inequality from rising temperatures within the first year. We also observe differences in the effects of temperature growth on inequality across different classifications, mainly states with high inequality and low temperature growth are more susceptible to changes in temperature growth than states with already high temperature growth and high inequality growth. States with low inequality growth exhibit similar positive effects on income inequality across low- and high-temperature-growth classifications. We find that the initial positive effect on income inequality is not permanent. However, if the effects of rising temperatures are unabated in the earlier periods, income inequality starts to rise in the later periods. Our results highlight an important pathway, that climate change can negatively affect sustainable development through increased income inequality.

Description

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Data are available from the authors upon request.

Keywords

Temperatures, Climate change, Income inequality, United States (US), SDG-13: Climate action, SDG-10: Reduced inequalities

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-10:Reduces inequalities
SDG-13:Climate action

Citation

Chisadza, C.; Clance, M.; Sheng, X.; Gupta, R. Climate Change and Inequality: Evidence from the United States. Sustainability 2023, 15, 5322. https://DOI.org/10.3390/su15065322.