Pigou Club

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The Pigou Club is described as an "an elite group of economists and pundits with the good sense to have publicly advocated higher Pigovian taxes, such as gasoline taxes or carbon taxes." A Pigovian tax (also spelled Pigouvian tax) is a tax levied to correct the negative externalities (negative side-effects) of a market activity. Typically these pundits and economists also advocate lowering other taxes, such as the income tax or the corporate tax. These ideas are also known as an Ecotax or green tax shift.

The Pigou Club was founded by economist N. Gregory Mankiw. The following 31 pundits and economists have been inducted into the Pigou Club as of December 10, 2006:

Name Date of Induction
William Baldwin June 24, 2006
Gary Becker June 17, 2006
Clive Crook June 24, 2006
Gregg Easterbrook June 17, 2006
Christopher Farrell June 24, 2006
Robert H. Frank June 17, 2006
Thomas Friedman June 17, 2006
David Frum November 9, 2006
Ted Gayer June 27, 2006
Al Gore June 24, 2006
Alan Greenspan October 2, 2006
Tim Harford December 8, 2006
Joe Klein June 17, 2006
Paul Krugman June 24, 2006
Anthony Lake October 30, 2006
Brink Lindsey December 5, 2006
N. Gregory Mankiw June 17, 2006
Megan McArdle June 24, 2006
Mike Moffatt September 16, 2006
William Nordhaus June 17, 2006
Richard Posner November 4, 2006
Jonathan Rauch June 17, 2006
Kenneth Rogoff September 16, 2006
Nouriel Roubini November 9, 2006
Andrew Samwick June 24, 2006
George Schultz October 30, 2006
Rob Stavins December 10, 2006
Andrew Sullivan June 24, 2006
Lawrence Summers October 31, 2006
John Tierney June 17, 2006
Hal Varian October 1, 2006

The group received a great deal of publicity when The New York Times published "Raise the Gasoline Tax? Funny, It Doesn’t Sound Republican" on October 8, 2006. The backlash came soon after, as the National Post, a Canadian right-of-center newspaper, started the Nopigou Club. [1]

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