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Case Study: republic of koreas investment plan for low carbon green growth

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There was a need for financing…When the Korean Government announced its National Strategy for Green Growth and Five-Year Plan in 2008, it needed to include a well-conceived plan for expe

Trang 1

There was a need for financing…

When the Korean Government announced its National Strategy for Green Growth and Five-Year Plan in 2008, it

needed to include a well-conceived plan for expenditures on concrete policy initiatives towards achieving

green growth

What was done?

The Government extended the Green New Deal programme, which was a stimulus package initially adopted to

tackle the financial crisis after 2008 but with emphasis on greening the economy as a way of stimulating new

growth The Green New Deal was expanded into a five-year development plan, with a committed budget

equal to 2 per cent of the annual GDP – all through Government investment Two public enterprises contributed

8.5 trillion won (0.8 per cent of GDP) The allocated budget covered large construction projects, including land,

water and building development as well as green transport infrastructure.1

The Government’s investment in low carbon green growth is all the more significant in terms of its proportion

within the Republic of Korea's annual GDP Allocating 2 per cent of the annual GDP is beyond the

recommenda-tion of the internarecommenda-tional community.2 The United Nations Environment Programme policy brief suggests that an

investment of 1 per cent of global GDP can contribute to reducing carbon dependency and lead to the

green-ing of the global economy.3 The Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change reported that investing 2–3

per cent of global GDP per annum enables the stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the

atmosphere.4

Expected results

Through the investment plan, positive economic and social impacts are expected, such as production

increases, value addition and job creation:5

1) Production should increase in value, from 182 trillion won to 206 trillion won from 2009 to 2013, which

would translate into an annual sum of 36–41 trillion won, or about 3.5–4 per cent of the annual GDP

2) The value-added effect is estimated at 75–95 trillion won, from 2009 to 2013, and annually 15–19 trillion

won, which amounts to 1.5–1.8 per cent of the annual GDP

3) Job creation in green industries is estimated at 1.18–1.47 million people, from 2009 to 2013 Overall job

creation is estimated at 1.56–1.81 million, with an annual average of 0.31–0.36 million jobs for both skilled

and unskilled labourers

Considerations for replicating

A well-designed national strategy alone will not lead to successful policy implementation It must be presented alongside a comprehensive portfolio of policy measures that includes dedicated public investment The Korean Government’s budgeting of 2 per cent of its annual GDP on the green growth projects provided the necessary guarantee to the private sector and consumers that the vision and strategy were not mere ambitions but true changes the Republic of Korea was committed to make

1 Randall S Jones and Byungseo Yoo, Korea’s Green Growth Strategy: Mitigating Climate Change and Developing New Growth Engines,

(Paris, OECD, 2011) Available from

www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/download/fulltext/5kmbhk4gh1ns.pdf?expires=1327649323&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=98298B5F649C09F4A

12957D2A70A00A7 (accessed 28 February 2012).

2 Meeyoung Cho, “South Korea to Spend $85 billion on Green Industries”, Reuters, 6 July 2009 Available from

www.reuters.com/article/2009/07/06/us-korea-greengrowth-idUSTRE5651Y720090706 (accessed 10 November 2011).

3 United Nations Environment Programme, Overview of the Republic of Korea’s National Strategy for Green Growth (Geneva, 2010)

Available from www.unep.org/PDF/PressReleases/201004_unep_national_strategy.pdf (accessed 10 November 2011)

4 Nicholas Stern, The Economics of Climate Change: The Stern Review (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2006).

5 Republic of Korea, Road to Our Future: Green Growth (Seoul, Presidential Commission on Green Growth, 2009).

Republic of Korea’s investment plan for low carbon

green growth

CASE STUDY

Low Carbon Green Growth Roadmap for Asia and the Pacific

Trang 2

There was a need for financing…

When the Korean Government announced its National Strategy for Green Growth and Five-Year Plan in 2008, it

needed to include a well-conceived plan for expenditures on concrete policy initiatives towards achieving

green growth

What was done?

The Government extended the Green New Deal programme, which was a stimulus package initially adopted to

tackle the financial crisis after 2008 but with emphasis on greening the economy as a way of stimulating new

growth The Green New Deal was expanded into a five-year development plan, with a committed budget

equal to 2 per cent of the annual GDP – all through Government investment Two public enterprises contributed

8.5 trillion won (0.8 per cent of GDP) The allocated budget covered large construction projects, including land,

water and building development as well as green transport infrastructure.1

The Government’s investment in low carbon green growth is all the more significant in terms of its proportion

within the Republic of Korea's annual GDP Allocating 2 per cent of the annual GDP is beyond the

recommenda-tion of the internarecommenda-tional community.2 The United Nations Environment Programme policy brief suggests that an

investment of 1 per cent of global GDP can contribute to reducing carbon dependency and lead to the

green-ing of the global economy.3 The Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change reported that investing 2–3

per cent of global GDP per annum enables the stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the

atmosphere.4

Expected results

Through the investment plan, positive economic and social impacts are expected, such as production

increases, value addition and job creation:5

1) Production should increase in value, from 182 trillion won to 206 trillion won from 2009 to 2013, which

would translate into an annual sum of 36–41 trillion won, or about 3.5–4 per cent of the annual GDP

2) The value-added effect is estimated at 75–95 trillion won, from 2009 to 2013, and annually 15–19 trillion

won, which amounts to 1.5–1.8 per cent of the annual GDP

3) Job creation in green industries is estimated at 1.18–1.47 million people, from 2009 to 2013 Overall job

creation is estimated at 1.56–1.81 million, with an annual average of 0.31–0.36 million jobs for both skilled

and unskilled labourers

Considerations for replicating

A well-designed national strategy alone will not lead to successful policy implementation It must be presented alongside a comprehensive portfolio of policy measures that includes dedicated public investment The Korean Government’s budgeting of 2 per cent of its annual GDP on the green growth projects provided the necessary guarantee to the private sector and consumers that the vision and strategy were not mere ambitions but true changes the Republic of Korea was committed to make

Low Carbon Green Growth Roadmap for Asia and the Pacific : Case Study - Republic of Korea's investment plan for low carbon green growth

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