Title: Regulatory Options
1Regulatory Options Efficiency
- What guidance can economics provide about how to
regulate polluting industries or firms?
2Why regulate?
- Does free market efficiently provide goods and
services? - Market failure (externalities, public goods,
etc.) - Market power (monopolies inefficiently restrict
production to raise prices) - Information problems (damages uncertain, food
safety, env quality)
3Types of questions in regulation
- What is the optimal amount of pollution?
- To reduce by X, who should reduce and by how
much? - What regulatory instrument(s) should be used to
achieve that level?
4The efficient amount of pollution
Marginal Control Cost
/unit
Marginal Damage Cost
Total Damage Cost
Total Control Cost
Q
Units of pollution
5Recall example from 1st day
- 60 firms, each pollute 100 tons
- 30 low abatement cost (100/ton)
- 30 high abatement (1000/ton)
- Everyone reduces 1 ton Cost33,000
- Total reduction 60 tons.
- For same cost could have reduced 330 tons.
6If low cost firms abate
- Either
- Reduce more pollution for the same amount of
moneyor - Reduce the same amount of pollution for less
money. - So we always want low-cost firm to abate.
7If costs arent constant greenhouse emissions of
Nitrogen
Cost ()
Who should abate the 1st unit of N?
MCA
MCB
? N
8How much abatement from each?
(A)
MCA
Loss from equal reduction
(B)
MCB
0
A
40
80
25
80
0
40
55
B
9How did he do that?
- Determine how much total abatement you want (e.g.
80) - Draw axis from 0 to 80 (A), 80 to 0 (B)
- Sum of abatements always equals 80.
- Draw MCA as usual, flip MCB
- Lines cross at equilibrium
- Price is MC for A and for B.
10The equimarginal principle
- Not an accident that the marginal abatement costs
are equal at the most efficient point. - Equimarginal Principle Efficiency for a
homogeneous pollutant requires equating the
marginal costs of control across all sources.
11Control costs
- Should include all other costs of control
- monitoring enforcement
- administrative
- Equipment
- High cost firms have incentive to innovate and
change production technology - Regulatory uncertainty increases costs.
12Instruments for regulation
- Taxes charge X per unit emitted. This
increases the cost of production. Forces firms
to internalize externality. - Quotas/standards uniform standard (all firms can
emit Y) or non-uniform. - Tradable permits All firms get Y permits to
pollute, can buy sell on market. Other initial
distn mechanisms.
13Example 1 Taxes in China
- China extremely high air pollution causes
significant health damage. - Instituted wide-ranging system of environmental
taxation - 2 tiers
- World Bank report estimates that MC of abatement
ltlt MB of abatement.
14A creative quota bubble policy
- Multiple emissions sources in different
locations. - Contained in an imaginary bubble.
- Regulation only governs amount that leaves the
bubble. - May apply to emissions points within same plant
or emissions points in plants owned by other
firms.
15Example 2 Bubble policy in RI
- Narraganset Electric Company
- 2 generation facilities in Providence, RI.
- Required to use lt 2.2 sulfur in oil.
- Under bubble policy
- Used 2.2 in one plant, burned natural gas at
other plant - Savings
- 3 million/year
16/unit
MSC
MPC
P
MEC
Pp
D
Dirty Good
Qc
Q
17What tax or quota is required?
- We know
- Optimal level of pollution is Q
- Marginal Social Cost at the optimum is P
- Marginal Private Cost at optimum is Pp.
- Optimal tax exactly internalizes externality
- t P - Pp
- Effectively raises MC of production
18MPC (with tax)
/unit
MSC
t
MPC (no tax)
P
Pp
D
Q (pollution)
Qc
Q
19Taxing consumption instead
- Taxing consumption
- Taxing consumers for every unit of a polluting
good that is purchased. - E.g. Automobile gasoline
- Can equivalently be used
- Instead of raising production costs, a
consumption tax lowers demand.
20/unit
MSC
MPC (no tax)
P
Pp
t
D (no tax)
D (with tax)
Q (pollution)
Qc
Q