EconomicsNature Communications
Climate econometric models indicate solar geoengineering would reduce inter-country income inequality
A. R. Harding, K. Ricke, et al.
This research conducted by Anthony R. Harding, Katharine Ricke, Daniel Heyen, Douglas G. MacMartin, and Juan Moreno-Cruz unveils the varied economic effects of solar geoengineering. By analyzing macroeconomic models alongside climate simulations, the study reveals that while global GDP impacts are temperature-related, solar geoengineering consistently lowers income inequality among countries—a crucial insight for future discussions on its distributional consequences.
Related Publications
Explore these studies to deepen your understanding
Adjacent work that informs or extends this paper's methodology and findings.
Economics
Urbanization can help reduce income inequality
G. Wan, X. Zhang, et al.
Economics
Impact of income inequality on climate change in Asia: the role of human capital
T. T. K. Oanh and N. T. H. Ha
Environmental Studies and Forestry
Hierarchical machine learning models can identify stimuli of climate change misinformation on social media
C. Rojas, F. Algra-maschio, et al.
Environmental Studies and Forestry
A 27-country test of communicating the scientific consensus on climate change
B. Većkalov, S. J. Geiger, et al.

