
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The passage of the Inflation Reduction Act in the United States unleashed its largest investment in climate and energy ever. But it also left many countries questioning some of its protectionist provisions, accusing the US of bending, if not breaking international trade rules under the WTO. So how do we move forward on climate without going backward on trade? Noah Kaufman says international trade rules need to be redesigned if protectionism is not to become an unintended consequence of green industrial policy. Kaufman is a senior research scholar at Columbia University's Center on Global Energy Policy and served in the Biden Administration’s Council of Economic Advisors.
Transcript: https://bit.ly/3CwHIiw
4.3
5050 ratings
The passage of the Inflation Reduction Act in the United States unleashed its largest investment in climate and energy ever. But it also left many countries questioning some of its protectionist provisions, accusing the US of bending, if not breaking international trade rules under the WTO. So how do we move forward on climate without going backward on trade? Noah Kaufman says international trade rules need to be redesigned if protectionism is not to become an unintended consequence of green industrial policy. Kaufman is a senior research scholar at Columbia University's Center on Global Energy Policy and served in the Biden Administration’s Council of Economic Advisors.
Transcript: https://bit.ly/3CwHIiw
4,326 Listeners
1,194 Listeners
937 Listeners
209 Listeners
337 Listeners
384 Listeners
318 Listeners
224 Listeners
708 Listeners
2,533 Listeners
77 Listeners
155 Listeners
396 Listeners
142 Listeners
101 Listeners