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Empirical Evaluation of CBAM and ETS Linkages: Impacts on Trade, Welfare, and Developing Country Exporters
Corresponding Author(s) : Do Phu Hai
Science of Law,
Vol. 2025 No. 2: SoL, No. 2 (2025)
Abstract
The operationalization of the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) alongside its Emissions Trading System (ETS) presents a critical, yet under-explored, nexus of trade and climate policy. This study fills that empirical gap by applying gravity-model estimations and stylized computable general equilibrium simulations to six developing-country exporters (Vietnam, Indonesia, Morocco, South Africa, Egypt, and India). We show that the CBAM×ETS linkage contracts carbon-intensive exports by 9–21%—with variations driven by emission intensity and adaptive capacity—and nearly doubles EU welfare losses relative to an ETS-only regime. By integrating bilateral trade-elasticity estimates with welfare modeling, we deliver the first multidimensional empirical assessment of climate-linked border adjustments, offering a rigorous framework for designing equitable, effective carbon-pricing measures in global trade.
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