For decades, the world's governments have struggled to move from talk to
action on climate. Many now hope that growing public concern will lead
to greater policy ambition, but the most widely promoted strategy to
address the climate crisis - the use of market-based programs - hasn't
been working and isn't ready to scale.
Danny Cullenward and David Victor show how the politics of creating and
maintaining market-based policies render them ineffective nearly
everywhere they have been applied. Reforms can help around the margins,
but markets' problems are structural and won't disappear with increasing
demand for climate solutions. Facing that reality requires relying more
heavily on smart regulation and industrial policy - government-led
strategies - to catalyze the transformation that markets promise, but
rarely deliver.