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Monetary architecture and the Green Transition

Author

Listed:
  • Steffen Murau

    (Global Climate Forum, Berlin, Germany
    Global Development Policy Center, Boston University, Boston (MA), USA)

  • Armin Haas

    (Global Climate Forum, Berlin, Germany)

  • Andrei Guter-Sandu

    (Department of Politics, Languages & International Studies, University of Bath, UK)

Abstract

How to finance the Green Transition toward net-zero carbon emissions remains an open question. The literature either operates within a market-failure paradigm that calls for carbon taxes or cap-and-trade to help markets correct themselves, or via war finance analogies that offer a “triad†of state intervention possibilities: taxation, treasury borrowing, and central bank money creation. These frameworks often lack a thorough conceptualization of endogenous credit money creation and disregard the systemic and procedural dimensions of financing the Green Transition. We propose “Monetary Architecture†as a more comprehensive framework that perceives the monetary and financial system as a constantly evolving and historically specific hierarchical web of interlocking balance sheets. Using the United States as a case study, we stress the importance of a systemic financing dimension that uses all available elasticity space in the monetary architecture while considering a division of labor between firefighting balance sheets such as central banks or treasuries and workhorse balance sheets such as off-balance-sheet fiscal agencies or shadow banks. Procedurally , public workhorses should provide an initial balance sheet expansion and crowd in the rest of the monetary architecture, notably shadow banks, for long-term funding. Firefighters should prevent systemic instability and manage a possible final contraction.

Suggested Citation

  • Steffen Murau & Armin Haas & Andrei Guter-Sandu, 2024. "Monetary architecture and the Green Transition," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 56(2), pages 382-401, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envira:v:56:y:2024:i:2:p:382-401
    DOI: 10.1177/0308518X231197296
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