working paper

Lessons Learned on Green Stimulus

Case Studies from the Global Financial Crisis

Joel Jaeger Michael I. Westphal Corey Park
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Endnotes

  1. 1Assuming exchange rate of £1 to $1.6071 in 2012.
  2. 2Assuming exchange rate of €1 to $1.39 in 2009.
  3. 3Assuming average exchange rate of $1.47 and $1.39 to €1 in 2008 and 2009, respectively.
  4. 4Assuming an average exchange rate of $0.1457 to 1 Renminbi (Matisoff 2012).
  5. 5Includes international financial institutions (IFIs), United Nations (UN) agencies, and other multilateral funds.
  6. 6The other being the $3 billion Countercyclical Support Facility (established in June 2009), in addition to regular loan and technical assistance products.
  7. 7This is not to suggest that low-carbon and climate-resilient development is not important for these sectors, but the degree to which climate is mainstreamed in these sectors cannot be assessed from high-level sectoral data.
  8. 8Beyond the ARRA, the United States spent another $24 billion on green measures through the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act in 2008 and $4.9 billion for budget increases for 2010.
  9. 9Data from (Robins et al. 2010)—cited in (ILO 2011) and others—put the percentage of Korean green stimulus to total stimulus at around 80 percent, but those data do not include a $10.9 billion non-green stimulus that Korea announced in November 2008 (Wassener 2008; Tienhaara 2018).
  10. 10Assuming exchange rate of £1 to $1.62 in 2009.
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