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Externalities

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What are the steps to initiate a market for emission or pollution rights ... Translate these allowable emissions into specific amounts for each producer of pollution ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Externalities


1
Externalities
2
What is an Externality?
  • Formally it is a cost or benefit received by a
    person not involved in a market transaction, and
    therefore not reflected in the market price of
    the commodity being transacted.
  • It is a third party effect, or
  • it is a spillover, or
  • an unintended side effect.

3
About Externalities
  • There are two types of externalities
  • negative externalities, or external costs
  • positive externalities, or external benefits
  • When do externalities arise?
  • Whenever someones actions affect another person
    and this impact is not considered in the
    decisions made by the person making these
    decisions

4
Examples of Externalities
  • Pollution
  • Traffic
  • Bees and Orchards
  • Inoculations
  • Public Goods

5
Optimality
  • In the case of externalities, private decision
    makingbased upon comparisons of MB vs. MCdont
    work out because of the cost or benefit affecting
    others
  • We focus on Social Costs and Benefits
  • Thus the comparison adds the external cost or
    benefit (at the margin) to the private cost
  • So, we have MSB MSC

6
The Correct Amount of an Externality
  • Optimal quantity is a standard economic
    condition equating at the margin
  • MSBMSC
  • The standard approach to this is for the price to
    reflect the costs imposed on others
  • This is usually called internalizing the
    externality

7
How do we determine the Correct amount of an
Externality?
MSC
Price (/Unit)
MPC
P
External Cost
P0
DMB (MPBMSB)
Q of X
Q0
Q
8
What causes an externality?
  • Under what conditions would there be no
    externality problem?
  • What is the real problem?
  • Lack of a Market Lack of (Well Defined)
    Property Rights
  • Alternative Viewpoint Ronald Coase
  • The Coase Theorem

9
Illustrating The Coase TheoremCattle in the Corn
10
The Coase Theorem
  • The Coase Theorem implies that externality
    problems can be handled through the market and
    through trade if property rights are well
    defined.
  • Necessary conditions
  • Zero Transactions Costs
  • Income Effects are ignored

11
A Numerical Example
12
A Numerical Example
6
2
5
1
3
4
2
4
1
-1
13
The Coase Theorem
  • The theorem implies that through bargaining in
    the private market, externality problems can be
    remedied without government intervention.
  • What is necessary is for the property rights to
    the activity that is the externality to be
    defined.
  • The theorem states that it does not matter to
    whom the property rights are given, just that the
    rights be well defined.

14
Solving Externality Problems
  • Use Pollution as an example
  • Alternatives
  • Pigovian Tax
  • Regulation
  • Property Rights Approach

15
Regulating PollutionQR Q
QR
MSC
Price (/Unit)
MPC
P
External Cost
P0
DMB (MPBMSB)
Q of X
Q0
Q
16
Regulation of Pollution in the United States
  • Command and Control Approach
  • Technology Forcing
  • Transition to Market Based Approaches
  • Bubbles
  • Offset
  • A Market for Pollution Emission Rights
  • Compare to Coase Theorem

17
A Market for Emission Rights
  • What are the steps to initiate a market for
    emission or pollution rights
  • Set a target level of environmental quality
  • Define this environmental quality in terms of a
    total amount of allowable emissions
  • Translate these allowable emissions into specific
    amounts for each producer of pollution

18
A Market for Emission Rights
  • Call these allowable amounts a Permit
  • Another problem how are these Permits
    distributed initially?
  • Give them away The Grandfathering Approach
  • Sell them The Auction Approach
  • Note that there is a fixed quantityof these
    Permits

19
A Market for Emission Rights
  • How is the market defined?
  • What is the commodity?
  • Is there some time dimension for this commodity?
  • (Does it last forever, 1 year, 5 years?
  • Is there a geographic dimension for this
    commodity?

20
A Market for Emission Rights
  • What happens when a market is set up?
  • What do firms consider?
  • What is the cost of treating the pollution?
  • What is the price of a pollution permit?
  • Who Sells? Who Buys?

21
A Market for Emission Rights
Price (/Unit)
MCA
Ppermits
MBp
Quantity of Pollution
Qa
Qp
22
A Market for Emission Rights
Price (/Unit)
MCA
Ppermits
MBp
Quantity of Pollution
Qp
Qa
23
A Market for Emission Rights
Price (/Unit)
MCA
Ppermits
MBp
Quantity of Pollution
Qa
Qp
24
A Market for Emission Rights
Price (/Unit)
MCA
Ppermits
MBp
Quantity of Pollution
Qp
Qa
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