Inclusive Growth and Climate Change Mitigation Programs and Policies in the ASEAN: Fiscal Implications

Maximillan Weber, Taha Chaiechi, R. Beg
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Abstract

Abstract Addressing urgent global climate change and inequality issues has been a major challenge for the ten AMS (ASEAN Member countries) given the diversity and local agendas with divergent political, economic, and social objectives. While regional policy frameworks prioritise harmonisation and inter-regional integration outcomes over national inequality and climate change policy goals, governments typically address the latter through discretionary policy add-ons that lead to policy fragmentation and competing fiscal goals that interfere with intermediate development plans. To achieve the aspired inequality outcomes (Regional Framework and Action Plan, ASEAN Declaration, 2013) and the ratified global climate targets (Paris Treaty 2015) simultaneously, such policy outcomes and commitments to collaborative policy action will need to be aligned within an integrated policy framework at the regional or global level, and externalities of economic activity internalised into a sustainable and inclusive fiscal model. Focusing on policy design, integration and evaluation aspects, this paper tests the hypothesis that, given the urgency of these issues, the ASEAN governments devised corrective and preventive measures to systematically mitigate these externalities through intervention at the policy level and multilateral coordination at the regional and global levels to achieve pro-green and pro-equity policy outcomes with a net social surplus. Adopting a qualitative methodology, this study conducts a structured literature search and subsequent document analysis, using advanced text mining techniques to extract, contextualise and map policy-relevant themes by geopolitical scope, policy intent and outcomes. Literature evidence confirmed that the ASEAN Member States have recognised and acknowledged the urgency of climate change and inequality challenges, and that these governments intervene at the local policy level and also engage in multilateral discussions, which lack formal commitment and transparency. This study could not produce literature evidence of a systematic approach by these governments internalising mitigation mechanisms into the fiscal policy frameworks to achieve the aspired inclusive and sustainable outcomes - by design, rather than discretionary policy add-ons - and thus, the hypothesis was rejected. Keywords: Sustainable fiscal policy, inclusive growth, climate change mitigation, policy integration, multilateral intervention, document analysis.
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东盟的包容性增长和减缓气候变化方案和政策:财政影响
摘要应对紧迫的全球气候变化和不平等问题一直是10个东盟成员国面临的重大挑战,因为它们的政治、经济和社会目标各不相同。虽然区域政策框架优先考虑协调和区域间一体化成果,而不是国家不平等和气候变化政策目标,但政府通常通过酌情决定的附加政策来解决后者,这会导致政策碎片化和相互竞争的财政目标,从而干扰中间发展计划。为了同时实现预期的不平等成果(2013年东盟宣言《区域框架和行动计划》)和已批准的全球气候目标(2015年《巴黎条约》),这些政策成果和对合作政策行动的承诺需要在区域或全球层面的综合政策框架内保持一致,并将经济活动的外部性内部化为可持续和包容性的财政模式。本文着眼于政策设计、整合和评估方面,检验了这样一个假设:鉴于这些问题的紧迫性,东盟各国政府制定了纠正和预防措施,通过政策层面的干预和区域和全球层面的多边协调,系统地缓解这些外部性,以实现具有净社会盈余的亲绿色和亲公平政策结果。采用定性方法,本研究进行了结构化的文献检索和随后的文件分析,使用先进的文本挖掘技术根据地缘政治范围、政策意图和结果提取、语境化和映射政策相关主题。文献证据证实,东盟成员国已经认识到并承认气候变化和不平等挑战的紧迫性,这些政府在地方政策层面进行干预,并参与缺乏正式承诺和透明度的多边讨论。这项研究无法提供文献证据,证明这些政府采取了一种系统的方法,将缓解机制内部化到财政政策框架中,以实现期望的包容性和可持续的结果——通过设计,而不是自由裁量的政策附加条款——因此,该假设被拒绝。关键词:可持续财政政策,包容性增长,减缓气候变化,政策整合,多边干预,文献分析
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