Rich countries owe poor countries $500 billion a year in “moral debt”

Rich countries owe poor countries $500 billion a year in “moral debt”
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Rich countries owe 500 billion dollars per year in “moral debt” to poor countries, estimates Nobel Prize winner Esther Duflo, who proposes making developed countries assume responsibility for global warming through two taxes.

“That’s what I call a moral debt. It’s not what it would cost to adapt; it’s not what it would cost to mitigate. That’s what we owe,” he said. detailed the economist in an interview with the Financial Times, based mainly on the effect of global warming on mortality in poor countries.

“There will be enormous damage,” continues Ms. Duflo, based on a study carried out by the Global Impact Lab in 2020 which showed that the number of heat-related deaths was likely to jump in poor countries by the end of the century.

“This damage will be concentrated in poor countries outside the OECD,” she adds, pointing to the responsibility of rich countries for climate change.
The G7 countries (Germany, Canada, States, , Italy, Japan, United Kingdom), or 10% of the planet’s population, emit around 25% of the CO2 linked to the global energy system, according to the IEA .

Esther Duflo is based on the work of the American economist Michael Greenstone who, based on a given monetary value for a year of life and the effect of global warming on the increase in mortality, estimates the cost of a ton of carbon. Multiplied by the quantity of annual emissions attributable to and the United States, 14 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent, the price of the “moral debt” then rises to 518 billion, argues Ms. Duflo.

To finance it, she proposes increasing the minimum tax rate for multinationals and taxing large fortunes, two mechanisms which she believes would make it possible to cover the annual envelope.

Climate financial aid owed by rich countries to developing countries is currently set at $100 billion per year. COP29, in November in Baku, must establish the new amount beyond 2025.

The future objective, crucial for rebuilding trust between the North and the South, will remain, whatever happens, well below needs: developing countries (excluding China) need 2,400 billion dollars per year by 2030 to finance their transition and adapt to climate change, according to a calculation by UN experts.

At the same time, multiple avenues are at the heart of international negotiations to find a way to close the gap, including debt relief for poor countries or financial innovations via new international taxes.

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