“…This finding was established as soon as the 1990s in the UK (Symons et al, 1994), then replicated to Australia (Cornwell and Creedy, 1996), and has been generalized in the 2000s, for instance with studies on the US (Bento et al, 2009;Burtraw et al, 2009;Rausch et al, 2011), Mexico (Gonzalez, 2012), Ireland (Callan et al, 2009), and China (Brenner et al, 2007;Liang and Wei, 2012). All these studies agree that recycling a fraction of carbon revenues into transfers to poor and middle class household can neutralize any regressive impact and make the reform progressive.…”