Stimulus packages adopted following the COVID-19 pandemic – such as the US Inflation Reduction Act and NextGenerationEU - have been presented as an opportunity to “build back better” and accelerate the transition to a low-carbon economy while re-igniting the economy. But this revival of industrial policy has also raised concerns about the potential for a global green subsidy war. OECD analysed funding measures worth USD 1.3 trillion announced around the world in 2020-21 to support development and diffusion of low-carbon technologies. These measures can trigger substantial greenhouse gas emissions reductions while boosting the growth of the clean tech sector in all regions and reducing dependence over fossil fuel imports. This policy brief summarises key findings from our analysis and offers additional recommendations to policymakers.
Did COVID‑19 accelerate the green transition?
An international assessment of fiscal spending measures to support low-carbon technologies
Policy brief
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
Policy brief
Implications for vulnerable countries and sectors
19 June 202614 Pages -
15 June 20268 Pages
-
Policy brief10 June 20268 Pages
-
Policy brief27 April 202612 Pages
Related publications
-
Policy brief10 June 20268 Pages
-
Working paper
The role of innovation across the supply chain
27 April 202675 Pages -
5 November 202593 Pages -
Working paper
The new green economy
27 June 202571 Pages