The transition to a low-carbon economy consistent with the 2015 Paris Agreement represents the greatest challenge of our time...re-aligning our financial sector. The deregulated and market-oriented approach to greening finance taken by the current UK government will not go far enough.
A fit for purpose Green Finance
Strategy is needed to address the market failures and systemic financial
risks posed by climate change and the transition to a low-carbon
economy. This entails getting the UK’s institutional architecture right
by developing a green and dirty public taxonomy, making climate-related
disclosures mandatory based on such a public taxonomy, and setting up a
Green Finance Action Taskforce composed of state actors to oversee the
greening of the financial system. It further entails greening monetary
policy and banking regulation, by decarbonising corporate bond purchases
and the Bank of England’s collateral framework, and aligning
risk-weighted capital adequacy rules with the greenness/dirtiness of the
assets that banks hold. It would finally entail the decarbonisation of
shadow banking and market based-finance. This can be achieved by
establishing green-supporting/dirty-penalising haircuts and margins, and
implementing a dirty penalising factor for Global Systemically
Important Banks (G-SIBs). Fiscal, industrial and environmental
regulation policies have a stronger and more substantial role to play in
achieving the low-carbon transition quickly. But the urgency of the
climate crisis requires that all policy tools are used for the purpose
of avoiding a climate breakdown. Our proposals ensure that the UK
financial system will support climate economic policies, instead of
undermining them.
1. Introduction
The UK economy needs to be decarbonised
rapidly. This decarbonisation requires the use of a wide range of
policies, including green fiscal policies, green industrial policies and
environmental regulation policies. However, decarbonisation might not
be rapid enough without the green transformation of the UK financial
system. The Green Finance Strategy announced by the UK government in
July 2019, and further elaborated in November 2020, does not go far
enough: it offers a deregulated decarbonisation approach that
prioritises the development of green asset classes to increase the
competitiveness of the UK financial sector, lacks penalties for dirty
activities and is over-reliant on transparency and disclosures.1 A
rapid low-carbon transition will not take place via such a
market-oriented approach because of a series of market failures that
include incompatible time horizons between private finance and the
climate crisis, corporate market power that opposes fundamental changes
in climate finance and subjective private classifications of green
assets that are susceptible to greenwashing.
Figure 1: A fit for purpose Green Finance Strategy: outline of recommendations
Source: Constructed by the authors
A fit for purpose Green Finance
Strategy should be more ambitious and should address these market
failures using a holistic and more interventionist approach. Such a
strategy needs to include (i) the development of a climate-aligned
institutional architecture that relies on a public taxonomy of green and
dirty activities, (ii) the greening of monetary policy and commercial
banks’ balance sheets and (iii) the decarbonisation of shadow banking
and market based-finance (see Figure 1).2
We first explain the reasons why the UK financial system should be
decarbonised and we then analyse the components of our proposed fit for
purpose Green Finance Strategy....
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