A SECOND-BEST POLLUTION SOLUTION WITH SEPARATE TAXATION OF COMMODITIES AND EMISSIONS

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "A SECOND-BEST POLLUTION SOLUTION WITH SEPARATE TAXATION OF COMMODITIES AND EMISSIONS"

Transcription

1 A SECOND-BEST POLLUTION SOLUTION WITH SEPARATE TAXATION OF COMMODITIES AND EMISSIONS by Basharat A.K. Pitafi and James Roumasset Working Paper No August 2002

2 A Second-best Pollution Solution with Separate Taxation of Commodities and Emissions Basharat A. K. Pitafi and James A. Roumasset University of Hawaii at Manoa ϒ July 26, 2002 JEL Classification: D62, H21, H23 Keywords: Second-best environmental taxation, Pigouvian taxation, tax normalization, Revenue recycling, Tax interaction Abstract: Several authors have argued that the second-best environmental tax on a dirty good is less than marginal emission damage associated with its consumption. These studies limit their analysis to cases in which emissions can only be reduced by a reduction of the dirty good. With a more general specification that allows abatement through input substitution, we show that the direct emissions tax cannot be less than marginal emission damage, regardless of the normalization. ϒ 542 SSB, 2424 Maile Way, Honolulu, HI Fax: (808) basharat@hawaii.edu. Authors gratefully acknowledge comments from Kwong Soo Cheong, Gerard Russo, Katerina Sherstyuk, and the participants of the World Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists, Monterey, CA, June 24-27, 2002.

3 1. Introduction Recent interest in global warming and carbon taxes has spawned a vigorous discussion regarding the size of the optimal environmental tax in relation to marginal environmental damage. Early contributions stressed the additional benefits (denoted as the revenuerecycling effect by Parry, 1995) of using environmental tax revenue to reduce the excess burden of pre-existing taxes [Nichols 1984, Terkla 1984, Lee and Misiolek 1986, Pearce 1991, Repetto et. al. 1992] 1. Nordhaus (1993), for example, using the DICE framework, empirically derived large carbon taxes when such revenue recycling was allowed, and much smaller taxes when it was not allowed. While these studies ignored the tax interaction between environmental and other taxes, Bovenberg and de Mooij (1994) 2 showed that such friction is not negligible. When other taxes are present in the system, environmental taxes may exacerbate pre-existing distortions and this unfavorable tax-interaction effect may outweigh the favorable revenue-recycling effect, such that a second-best emissions tax is smaller than the marginal emissions damage (MED). This did not quite settle the issue, however, and soon Fullerton 3 (1997) and Schöb (1997) showed that the second-best environmental taxes can be greater or smaller than MED depending on the choice of tax instruments. Further confusion was created in the literature by subsuming the size-of-emission-tax argument 1 Tullock (1967) is often credited with pioneering the idea. 2 Also see Bovenberg and de Mooij (1997), and Bovenberg and Goulder (1996). 3 Fullerton s treatment also clarifies how the results of Boveberg and de Mooij (1994) depend on the complementarity between dirty good and labor. Fuest and Huber (1999) show that when there is gross substitutability between the dirty good and the other tax base (labor/clean good), the optimal tax on the dirty good always exceeds the Pigovian tax.

4 into the "double dividend" debate without a consensus on the definition of double dividend. The purpose of all these analyses was to determine how the size of the environmental tax is affected by the presence of other taxes. At first blush, the problem seems straightforward. One needs only to specify the nature of emissions in a fairly general way and then extend the theory of optimal commodity taxation to include emission taxes. Generality can be achieved by treating emissions as an input (e.g., Oates and Strassman 1984, and Fullerton and Metcalf ). Here we encounter a difficulty, however, because the conventional method of solving for an optimal system of commodity taxes is not directly applicable in the presence of a non-market good (environment). In the absence of an emissions price, the elasticities involving the emissions price, which would make a major component of a conventional tax solution, cannot be computed. Sandmo (1975) and others using similar models (e.g., Bovenberg and de Mooij 1994, Fullerton 1997) avoid this difficulty by making emissions a function of a commodity called the dirty good and taxing the dirty good in order to tax emissions. While this approach renders the model tractable, it severely restricts pollution avoidance possibilities. For instance, in this polar case, imposition of a labor tax does not result in the substitution of emissions for labor in production that would have increased the demand for emissions input. This is the reason behind the Bovenberg and de Mooij result (emissions tax less than MED) and the Fullerton result (the tax-med comparison 4 Fullerton and Metcalf use this technology in comparing the rent-generating and rent-capturing emissions control policies. Oates and Strassmann use it to compare the efficiency of effluent fees under different noncompetitive market structures. 2

5 dependent on normalization or the choice of tax instruments). 5 Moreover, the utility function is typically assumed to exhibit weak separability between emissions and other goods. This further restricts the applicability of the results from these models. Accordingly, we proceed with a different solution strategy. We maintain the generality afforded by regarding emission as an input to production and solve the non-market problem by treating emissions analogously to the other input, labor. Just as the consumer is endowed with units of labor that can be sold or consumed, she is also endowed with emission rights that can be sold to polluters or retained (thereby reducing pollution). We derive the Ramsey price of emissions and then exploit institutional equivalency under zero transaction costs to replace the pollution market with an equivalent pollution tax. We also relax the assumption of weak separability. Using this framework, we show that, when the revenue requirement warrants distortionary taxation, the second-best emissions tax exceeds MED, and quantity of emissions is less than in the first-best solution. If the revenue requirement is small enough to be financed by emissions tax alone, then a first-best optimum obtains with the emissions tax equal to MED. These results are independent of tax normalization. The rest of the paper is organized as follows. The model and derivation of result are provided in section 2. Section 3 summarizes the results and concludes. 5 The only abatement method allowed is reducing the consumption of the dirty good. It does not allow for abatement by switching to a cleaner process or using end-of-pipe treatment. This implies that consumer cannot choose the amount of emissions independently of the amount of the dirty good, and the two cannot, therefore, be taxed separately. Because the dirty tax changes with normalization, the implied emissions tax also varies. 3

6 2. The Model Following Oates and Strassmann (1984), emissions are modeled as a virtual input. This allows for all three abatement methods, i.e., a) decreasing output, b) switching to a cleaner process, and c) end-of-pipe treatment. In consonance with, but simultaneously generalizing, the prototypical approach 6, we have two goods, one of which is dirty (good d) in the sense that emissions are necessary for its production, while the other is a clean good (c). The production functions are: ( 1 ) c = c( lc), d = d( ld, e), where l c and l d are labor inputs to sector c and d respectively and e is the emissions input. For convenience, we first assume a market for emissions and then replace the market with an emissions tax. The producers profit-maximizing first-order conditions (FOCs) are now: d d ( 2 ) p c = w, pd = w, pd = pe lc ld e where w is the wage rate, p e is the emissions market price, and p c and p d are the producer prices of the good c and d respectively. The consumer is initially endowed with N pollution rights, 7 sells e rights to the producers in an emissions market and consumes the rest, n, in the same way that she sells part (l) of the total labor endowment (L) and consumes the rest as leisure (v). Thus, l c + l d = l = (L - 6 Henceforth, prototypical or standard model or approach refers to Bovenberg and de Mooij (1994), Fullerton (1997) and similar models. 7 N can be set arbitrarily at some number greater than or equal to the optimal quantity of emissions. To fix ideas, however, we may take it to be the maximum amount of pollution that would obtain if the emissions 4

7 v) and e = (N - n). The consumer s utility is, therefore, u(c, d, v, n, G), where G is a government good financed through taxes, is weakly separable in the utility function, and is held constant (following the standard models). For the government revenue constraint, G, to be met, the consumer pays ad valorem commodity 8 taxes, t c and t d. The revenue constraint is then: ( 3 ) tc c + td pd d G where p c and p d are the producer prices of the good c and d respectively, and the former is normalized to unity, without loss of generality. The consumer maximizes the utility subject to the budget constraint: ( 4 ) w l + p e = ( 1+ tc) c + (1 + td) pd d e The resulting first-order conditions (FOCs) are: ( 5 ) i) = λ (1 + tc), ii) = λ. pd (1 + td), iii) = λ. w, iv) = λ. pe d v n where λ is the marginal utility of income. Re-writing (5), we get a more intuitive form: ( 5A ) i) (1 + tc) = λ, ii) pd.(1 + td) = λ, iii) w = λ, iv) pe = λ d v n price were zero. 8 Because demand function has the property of being homogeneous of degree zero in consumer prices, i.e., only relative prices matter, one of the goods can be chosen as numeraire (see, e.g., Keller 1980). The numeraire s price can be set to unity without changing the relative prices. Then all the others prices are stated in terms of units of the numeraire good. The same is true of supply function in terms of supplier prices. However, in the presence of taxes, the consumer and supplier prices are differentiated. For convenience and ease of interpretation, we often set the consumer and supplier prices of the same good to unity, causing the tax wedge between the two to disappear, i.e., we perform tax normalization. Since the choice of the numeraire is arbitrary, many alternate normalizations are possible. Here we are normalizing the labor tax to zero. Later we consider other normalizations and show that they yield the same results. 5

8 From (5)(i), the marginal utility of income, λ, is ( 6 ) λ = ( 1+ tc) Note the relationship of λ to the tax on the clean good. Now, we are ready to compare the emissions price with the marginal emissions damage. Plugging (6) in (5)(iv) gives: ( 7 ) p (1 e = + tc) n (1 + tc) p e = e Q n = N e where the R.H.S. is just the marginal emissions damage (MED). Re-arranging (7), we get: ( 8 ) pe = ( 1+ tc) = ( MED) (1 + tc) e > MED pe ( 9 ) = MED when when t > 0 c t = 0 c Thus, when there are no commodity taxes, the emissions price and MED are equal. Positive commodity taxation (warranted by a revenue requirement in excess of emissions tax revenue) must increase the efficiency price of emissions above MED. This is because the taxes on commodities raise consumer prices and encourage the consumer to substitute leisure and environment for consumption of commodities. This reduces the supply of emissions permits and raises the emissions price to the producers. When the emissions price is implemented as an emissions tax on producers, the emissions tax exceeds MED. 6

9 For purposes of illustration, consider a downward sloping demand for permits (value of marginal product of emissions) curve and an upward sloping supply of permits (marginal cost of damage from emissions) curve, as shown in Figure 1. Imposing the commodity tax, shifts the permits supply curve to the left, representing a substitution toward the consumption of untaxed environmental amenities and away from the consumption of the taxed commodity. Figure 1: Second-best Emissions Price/Tax (induced by commodity taxation) e.( 1 + tc) e d p d. ed In contrast, consider the case where G = 0. In the absence of distortionary tax, t c, the permit supply equals permit demand at the emissions level e 1 and price p 1. Since the government expenditures are zero, the tax revenue, p 1.e 1, is simply disbursed to the consumer in lump-sum fashion. Even as G increases, we remain at the first-best equilibrium so long as G = p 1.e 1. 7

10 Once the revenue constraint becomes binding, i.e., G = p 1.e 1, then distortionary taxes become necessary to raise any more revenue. As shown in Figure 1, this shifts the permit supply curve to the left, raises the emissions price to p 2, and reduces the emissions quantity to e 2. The value of MED at the new emissions level is MED 2. 9 The emissions price, p 2, is larger than this MED level. Since this emissions price is implemented as a tax on producers, the resulting emissions tax is larger than MED. The emissions tax is also larger than the first-best MED level, i.e., p The Normalization Problem The conventional method of normalization in tax models is to use the same good as numeraire for both consumer and producer prices. As a result, without loss of generality, one of the taxes is zero. When we set the labor tax to zero, commodity taxes are used to meet any excess revenue requirement. We have shown above that, in this case, the emissions tax is greater than MED. This is because leisure and environmental amenities are substituted for other consumption and the emissions supply schedule shifts leftward. Similarly, when we use the labor tax to raise revenue and set the clean good tax to zero, again we get the result that the emissions tax is greater than MED. This is because labor tax reduces the consumer s income and induces the consumer to substitute leisure and environmental amenities for other consumption, which, in turn, reduces the supply of emissions, as in Fig. 1. Any combination of the clean good tax and labor tax also yields the same results because they both affect emissions supply in the same way. 10 Therefore, 9 In the comparison between emissions tax and MED commonly used in the literature (e.g., Bovenberg and de Mooij 1994, Fullerton 1997), MED is implicitly defined as its value at the second-best optimum. 10 The consumer budget constraint with two commodity and one labor taxes is: c.( 1+ tc) + d. pd.(1 + td) = l. w.(1 tl) + e. p e 8

11 under any normalization, the emissions tax is equal to or greater than MED at the second-best optimum. Our results are the same under any choice of tax instruments. They agree with those of the prototypical model in case of a commodity tax but differ in case of a labor tax. The intuition behind this difference is explained next. 2.2 Comparison with the Standard Model Why do we get the result that the emissions tax is equal to or larger than MED (under any choice of tax instruments), in contrast with the standard result that the dirty good tax is less than MED (at least in the presence of a labor tax)? As suggested in section 1, the answer lies in the input substitutability between emissions and labor. In the standard model (e.g., Bovenberg and de Mooij 1994, and Fullerton 1997) does not allow substitution between emissions and labor as inputs in the production of a dirty good. By assuming that emissions are a fixed function of the dirty good, the elasticity of input substitution is implicitly assumed zero. This implies that the consumer cannot choose the amounts of environmental amenities to consume (or emissions to tolerate) independently of the amount of dirty good consumed. Therefore, taxing emissions or taxing dirty good is equivalent. More importantly, when a labor tax is imposed, producers cannot respond by substituting emissions for labor. If they could, the demand for emissions would Multiplying through by a constant, Q, the consumer FOCs now become: i) = λ.(1 + tc). Q ii) = λ. pd.(1 + td). Q, iii) = λ. w.(1 tl). Q, iv) = d v n, λ Q = 1 (1 t ) Note that we can set Q = 1 (1 + tc) to eliminate the clean good tax or l to eliminate the labor tax. Dividing (iv) by (i) gives: pe. Q = = MED p e =.( 1+ tc) = ( MED).(1 + tc) (1 + tc). Q n n pe MED when t c [0,1]. pe. Q 9

12 increase, as would the emissions price/tax, as in our model discussed above. 3. Conclusions We examine the optimal emissions tax in a model that allows for multiple means of abatement. When there is no distortionary taxation to meet the revenue requirement, the emissions tax equals MED. When there is distortionary taxation, the emissions tax exceeds MED evaluated at the second-best optimum, and the emissions quantity is less than in the first-best solution. The second-best emissions tax also exceeds MED at the first-best optimum. The assumption of no input substitution is the underlying reason for the results of the prototypical model. Without this restriction, our model provides the result that emissions tax is larger than MED and remains larger under any normalization. Thus, modeling the production function to allow for input substitution, and the resulting abatement possibilities, avoids the troublesome normalization problem that has plagued the double dividend debate. When the elasticity of input substitution is positive, the emissions tax is greater than or equal to MED. 10

13 References Bovenberg, A. L. and R. A. de Mooij, 1994, Environmental Levies and Distortionary Taxation, American Economic Review 84, Bovenberg, A. L. and R. A. de Mooij, 1997, Environmental Levies and Distortionary Taxation: Reply, American Economic Review 87, Bovenberg, A. L. and L. H. Goulder, 1996, Optimal Taxation in the presence of Other Taxes: General Equilibrium Analyses, American Economic Review 4, Fuest, C. and B. Huber, 1999, Second-Best Pollution Taxes: An Analytical Framework and some New results, Bulletin of Economic Research 51, Fullerton, D., 1997, Environmental Levies and Distortionary Taxation: Comment, American Economic Review 1, Fullerton, D., G. E. Metcalf, 2001, Environmental controls, scarcity rents, and preexisting distortions, Journal of Public Economics 80, Keller, W. J., 1980, Tax Incidence: A General Equilibrium Approach (North-Holland, New York). Lee, D. R. and W. S. Misiolek, 1986, Substituting Pollution Taxation for General Taxation: Some Implications for Efficiency in Pollution Taxation, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 13, Nordhaus, W., 1993, Optimal Greenhouse-Gas Reduction and Tax Policy in the DICE Model, American Economic Review 83,

14 Oates, W. E. and D. L. Strassmann, 1984, Effluent Fees and Market Structure, Journal of Public Economics 24, Parry, I. W. H., 1995, Pollution Taxes and Revenue Recycling, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 29, S Pearce, D., 1991, The Role of Carbon Taxes in Adjusting to Global Warming, Economic Journal 101, Repetto, R., R. C. Dower, R. Jenkins, and J. Geoghegan, 1992, Green Fees: How a Tax Shift Can Work for the Environment and the Economy, Washington, DC: World Resources Institute. Schöb, R., 1997, Environmental Taxes and Pre-Existing Distortions: The Normalization Trap, International Tax and Public Finance 4, Terkla, D., 1984, The Efficiency Value of Effluent Tax Revenues, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 11, Tullock, G., Excess Benefit. Water Resources Research 3,

Environmental taxation and the double dividend

Environmental taxation and the double dividend International Society for Ecological Economics Internet Encyclopaedia of Ecological Economics Environmental taxation and the double dividend William K. Jaeger February 2003 I. Introduction Environmental

More information

Environmental Levies and Distortionary Taxation: Pigou, Taxation, and Pollution

Environmental Levies and Distortionary Taxation: Pigou, Taxation, and Pollution Tufts University From the SelectedWorks of Gilbert E. Metcalf 2002 Environmental Levies and Distortionary Taxation: Pigou, Taxation, and Pollution Gilbert E. Metcalf, Tufts University Available at: https://works.bepress.com/gilbert_metcalf/8/

More information

Economics 230a, Fall 2014 Lecture Note 7: Externalities, the Marginal Cost of Public Funds, and Imperfect Competition

Economics 230a, Fall 2014 Lecture Note 7: Externalities, the Marginal Cost of Public Funds, and Imperfect Competition Economics 230a, Fall 2014 Lecture Note 7: Externalities, the Marginal Cost of Public Funds, and Imperfect Competition We have seen that some approaches to dealing with externalities (for example, taxes

More information

A Note on Optimal Taxation in the Presence of Externalities

A Note on Optimal Taxation in the Presence of Externalities A Note on Optimal Taxation in the Presence of Externalities Wojciech Kopczuk Address: Department of Economics, University of British Columbia, #997-1873 East Mall, Vancouver BC V6T1Z1, Canada and NBER

More information

Environmental Policy in the Presence of an. Informal Sector

Environmental Policy in the Presence of an. Informal Sector Environmental Policy in the Presence of an Informal Sector Antonio Bento, Mark Jacobsen, and Antung A. Liu DRAFT November 2011 Abstract This paper demonstrates how the presence of an untaxed informal sector

More information

Principle of targeting in environmental taxation

Principle of targeting in environmental taxation Principle of targeting in environmental taxation Firouz Gahvari Department of Economics University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Urbana, IL 61801, USA November 2010 I thank Luca Micheletto for his careful

More information

Environmental Taxes and the Double-Dividend Hypothesis: Did You Really Expect Something for Nothing?

Environmental Taxes and the Double-Dividend Hypothesis: Did You Really Expect Something for Nothing? Environmental Taxes and the Double-Dividend Hypothesis: Did You Really Expect Something for Nothing? by Don Fullerton Department of Economics University of Texas Austin, TX 78712-1173 and NBER dfullert@eco.utexas.edu

More information

Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 19, No. 4. (Autumn, 2000), pp

Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 19, No. 4. (Autumn, 2000), pp Policy Analysis in the Presence of Distorting Taxes Ian W. H. Parry; Wallace E. Oates Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 19, No. 4. (Autumn, 2000), pp. 603-613. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0276-8739%28200023%2919%3a4%3c603%3apaitpo%3e2.0.co%3b2-o

More information

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES TWO GENERALIZATIONS OF A DEPOSIT-REFUND SYSTEM. Don Fullerton Ann Wolverton

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES TWO GENERALIZATIONS OF A DEPOSIT-REFUND SYSTEM. Don Fullerton Ann Wolverton NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES TWO GENERALIZATIONS OF A DEPOSIT-REFUND SYSTEM Don Fullerton Ann Wolverton Working Paper 7505 http://www.nber.org/papers/w7505 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1050 Massachusetts

More information

Health effects and optimal environmental taxes

Health effects and optimal environmental taxes Journal of Public Economics 87 (2003) 323 335 www.elsevier.com/ locate/ econbase Health effects and optimal environmental taxes Roberton. Williams III Department of Economics, University of Texas at Austin

More information

Subsidizing Non-Polluting Goods vs. Taxing Polluting Goods for Pollution Reduction

Subsidizing Non-Polluting Goods vs. Taxing Polluting Goods for Pollution Reduction Butler University Digital Commons @ Butler University Scholarship and Professional Work - Business Lacy School of Business 12-1-2013 Subsidizing Non-Polluting Goods vs. Taxing Polluting Goods for Pollution

More information

Environmental Taxes and the Double-Dividend Hypothesis: Did You Really Expect Something for Nothing

Environmental Taxes and the Double-Dividend Hypothesis: Did You Really Expect Something for Nothing Chicago-Kent Law Review Volume 73 Issue 1 Symposium on Second-Best Theory and Law & Economics Article 6 December 1997 Environmental Taxes and the Double-Dividend Hypothesis: Did You Really Expect Something

More information

Are Green Taxes a Good Way to Help Solve State Budget Deficits?

Are Green Taxes a Good Way to Help Solve State Budget Deficits? Sustainability 2012, 4, 1329-1353; doi:10.3390/su4061329 Article OPEN ACCESS sustainability ISSN 2071-1050 www.mdpi.com/journal/sustainability Are Green Taxes a Good Way to Help Solve State Budget Deficits?

More information

First, Do No Harm: Welfare Gains and Welfare Losses from Environmental Taxation. Charles L. Ballard* Michigan State University

First, Do No Harm: Welfare Gains and Welfare Losses from Environmental Taxation. Charles L. Ballard* Michigan State University Very Preliminary: Please do not quote without permission. First, o No Harm: Welfare Gains and Welfare osses from Environmental Taxation Charles. Ballard* Michigan State University John H. Goddeeris* Michigan

More information

2. A DIAGRAMMATIC APPROACH TO THE OPTIMAL LEVEL OF PUBLIC INPUTS

2. A DIAGRAMMATIC APPROACH TO THE OPTIMAL LEVEL OF PUBLIC INPUTS 2. A DIAGRAMMATIC APPROACH TO THE OPTIMAL LEVEL OF PUBLIC INPUTS JEL Classification: H21,H3,H41,H43 Keywords: Second best, excess burden, public input. Remarks 1. A version of this chapter has been accepted

More information

Fiscal Interactions and Climate Change Policy

Fiscal Interactions and Climate Change Policy Fiscal Interactions and Climate Change Policy Lawrence H. Goulder* May 2013 *Stanford University, Resources for the Future, and National Bureau of Economic Research. E- mail: goulder@stanford.edu. The

More information

Gasoline Taxes and Externalities

Gasoline Taxes and Externalities Gasoline Taxes and Externalities - Parry and Small (2005) derive second-best gasoline tax, disaggregated into components reflecting external costs of congestion, accidents and air pollution - also calculate

More information

Environmental Policy in the Presence. of an Informal Sector a

Environmental Policy in the Presence. of an Informal Sector a Environmental Policy in the Presence of an Informal Sector a Antonio M. Bento b, Mark R. Jacobsen c, and Antung A. Liu d March 2018 Abstract We demonstrate how the presence of an informal sector can sharply

More information

Theoretical Tools of Public Finance. 131 Undergraduate Public Economics Emmanuel Saez UC Berkeley

Theoretical Tools of Public Finance. 131 Undergraduate Public Economics Emmanuel Saez UC Berkeley Theoretical Tools of Public Finance 131 Undergraduate Public Economics Emmanuel Saez UC Berkeley 1 THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL TOOLS Theoretical tools: The set of tools designed to understand the mechanics

More information

Environmental Policy in the Presence. of an Informal Sector a

Environmental Policy in the Presence. of an Informal Sector a Environmental Policy in the Presence of an Informal Sector a Antonio M. Bento b, Mark R. Jacobsen c, and Antung A. Liu d April 2017 Abstract We demonstrate how the presence of an informal sector can sharply

More information

Appendix: Numerical Model

Appendix: Numerical Model Appendix to: Costs of Alternative Environmental Policy Instruments in the Presence of Industry Compensation Requirements A. Lans Bovenberg Lawrence H. Goulder Mark R. Jacobsen Appendix: Numerical Model

More information

The Double Dividend: Fact or Fallacy?

The Double Dividend: Fact or Fallacy? Andrea Garnero Master PPD - Paris School of Economics March 31 th 2010 1 2 First approaches More recent approaches 3 Some calibrations for France Other countries 4 1 2 First approaches More recent approaches

More information

Environmental Policy in the Presence. of an Informal Sector

Environmental Policy in the Presence. of an Informal Sector Environmental Policy in the Presence of an Informal Sector Antonio M. Bento a, Mark R. Jacobsen b, and Antung A. Liu c November 2013 Abstract We demonstrate how the presence of an untaxed informal sector

More information

Oil Monopoly and the Climate

Oil Monopoly and the Climate Oil Monopoly the Climate By John Hassler, Per rusell, Conny Olovsson I Introduction This paper takes as given that (i) the burning of fossil fuel increases the carbon dioxide content in the atmosphere,

More information

Chapter 19 Optimal Fiscal Policy

Chapter 19 Optimal Fiscal Policy Chapter 19 Optimal Fiscal Policy We now proceed to study optimal fiscal policy. We should make clear at the outset what we mean by this. In general, fiscal policy entails the government choosing its spending

More information

What Industry Should We Privatize?: Mixed Oligopoly and Externality

What Industry Should We Privatize?: Mixed Oligopoly and Externality What Industry Should We Privatize?: Mixed Oligopoly and Externality Susumu Cato May 11, 2006 Abstract The purpose of this paper is to investigate a model of mixed market under external diseconomies. In

More information

Optimal Actuarial Fairness in Pension Systems

Optimal Actuarial Fairness in Pension Systems Optimal Actuarial Fairness in Pension Systems a Note by John Hassler * and Assar Lindbeck * Institute for International Economic Studies This revision: April 2, 1996 Preliminary Abstract A rationale for

More information

Cash-Flow Taxes in an International Setting. Alan J. Auerbach University of California, Berkeley

Cash-Flow Taxes in an International Setting. Alan J. Auerbach University of California, Berkeley Cash-Flow Taxes in an International Setting Alan J. Auerbach University of California, Berkeley Michael P. Devereux Oxford University Centre for Business Taxation This version: September 3, 2014 Abstract

More information

Partial privatization as a source of trade gains

Partial privatization as a source of trade gains Partial privatization as a source of trade gains Kenji Fujiwara School of Economics, Kwansei Gakuin University April 12, 2008 Abstract A model of mixed oligopoly is constructed in which a Home public firm

More information

A note on Cost Benefit Analysis, the Marginal Cost of Public Funds, and the Marginal Excess Burden of Taxes

A note on Cost Benefit Analysis, the Marginal Cost of Public Funds, and the Marginal Excess Burden of Taxes A note on Cost Benefit Analysis, the Marginal Cost of Public Funds, and the Marginal Excess Burden of Taxes Per Olov Johansson Stockholm School of Economics and CERE Per Olov.Johansson@hhs.se Bengt Kriström

More information

EconS Micro Theory I 1 Recitation #7 - Competitive Markets

EconS Micro Theory I 1 Recitation #7 - Competitive Markets EconS 50 - Micro Theory I Recitation #7 - Competitive Markets Exercise. Exercise.5, NS: Suppose that the demand for stilts is given by Q = ; 500 50P and that the long-run total operating costs of each

More information

Environmental Controls, Scarcity Rents, and Pre-Existing Distortions

Environmental Controls, Scarcity Rents, and Pre-Existing Distortions Environmental Controls, Scarcity Rents, and Pre-Existing Distortions by Don Fullerton Department of Economics University of Texas Austin, TX 78712-1173 and NBER dfullert@eco.utexas.edu and Gilbert Metcalf

More information

Chapter 8. Revenue recycling and environmental policy

Chapter 8. Revenue recycling and environmental policy Chapter 8. Revenue recycling and environmental policy Recognizing that market-based environmental policies generate substantial revenues for any meaningful emissions reductions, assumptions must be made

More information

2c Tax Incidence : General Equilibrium

2c Tax Incidence : General Equilibrium 2c Tax Incidence : General Equilibrium Partial equilibrium tax incidence misses out on a lot of important aspects of economic activity. Among those aspects : markets are interrelated, so that prices of

More information

Arindam Das Gupta Independent. Abstract

Arindam Das Gupta Independent. Abstract With non competitive firms, a turnover tax can dominate the VAT Arindam Das Gupta Independent Abstract In an example with monopoly final and intermediate goods firms and substitutable primary and intermediate

More information

9. Real business cycles in a two period economy

9. Real business cycles in a two period economy 9. Real business cycles in a two period economy Index: 9. Real business cycles in a two period economy... 9. Introduction... 9. The Representative Agent Two Period Production Economy... 9.. The representative

More information

Green tax reform in Belgium: Combining regional general equilibrium and microsimulation

Green tax reform in Belgium: Combining regional general equilibrium and microsimulation Microsimulation Research Workshop, October 2012 Toon Vandyck Green tax reform in Belgium: Combining regional general equilibrium and microsimulation Work in progress This paper provides a general equilibrium

More information

Sudden Stops and Output Drops

Sudden Stops and Output Drops Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Research Department Staff Report 353 January 2005 Sudden Stops and Output Drops V. V. Chari University of Minnesota and Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Patrick J.

More information

"The General Equilibrium Incidence of Environmental Taxes" (with Don Fullerton), Journal of Public Economics, Vol. 91, No. 3-4 (April 2007),

The General Equilibrium Incidence of Environmental Taxes (with Don Fullerton), Journal of Public Economics, Vol. 91, No. 3-4 (April 2007), The general equilibrium incidence of environmental taxes By: Don Fullerton, Garth Heutel "The General Equilibrium Incidence of Environmental Taxes" (with Don Fullerton), Journal of Public Economics, Vol.

More information

The theory of taxation/2 (ch. 19 Stiglitz, ch. 20 Gruber, ch.14 Rosen)) Taxation and economic efficiency

The theory of taxation/2 (ch. 19 Stiglitz, ch. 20 Gruber, ch.14 Rosen)) Taxation and economic efficiency The theory of taxation/2 (ch. 19 Stiglitz, ch. 20 Gruber, ch.14 Rosen)) Taxation and economic efficiency 1 Taxation and economic efficiency Most taxes introduce deadweight losses because they alter relative

More information

Application: The Costs of Taxation

Application: The Costs of Taxation Application: The Costs of Taxation Chapter 8. Application: The Costs of Taxation Welfare economics is the study of how the allocation of resources affects economic well-being. Buyers and sellers receive

More information

AAEC 6524: Environmental Theory and Policy Analysis. Outline. Environmental Policy with Pre-existing Distortions Part B. Klaus Moeltner Spring 2017

AAEC 6524: Environmental Theory and Policy Analysis. Outline. Environmental Policy with Pre-existing Distortions Part B. Klaus Moeltner Spring 2017 under AAEC 6524: Environmental Theory and Analysis Environmental with Pre-existing Part B Klaus Moeltner Spring 2017 March 2, 2017 1 / 31 Outline under under 2 / 31 Closer look at MIE under, continued

More information

Money in an RBC framework

Money in an RBC framework Money in an RBC framework Noah Williams University of Wisconsin-Madison Noah Williams (UW Madison) Macroeconomic Theory 1 / 36 Money Two basic questions: 1 Modern economies use money. Why? 2 How/why do

More information

DIPLOMARBEIT. Titel der Diplomarbeit. Pollution Taxation and Environmental Quality. Verfasser. Sebastian Reis. angestrebter akademischer Grad

DIPLOMARBEIT. Titel der Diplomarbeit. Pollution Taxation and Environmental Quality. Verfasser. Sebastian Reis. angestrebter akademischer Grad DIPLOMARBEIT Titel der Diplomarbeit Pollution Taxation and Environmental Quality Verfasser Sebastian Reis angestrebter akademischer Grad Magister der Sozial- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften (Mag.rer.soc.oec.)

More information

Economics 2450A: Public Economics Section 1-2: Uncompensated and Compensated Elasticities; Static and Dynamic Labor Supply

Economics 2450A: Public Economics Section 1-2: Uncompensated and Compensated Elasticities; Static and Dynamic Labor Supply Economics 2450A: Public Economics Section -2: Uncompensated and Compensated Elasticities; Static and Dynamic Labor Supply Matteo Paradisi September 3, 206 In today s section, we will briefly review the

More information

Factors that Affect Fiscal Externalities in an Economic Union

Factors that Affect Fiscal Externalities in an Economic Union Factors that Affect Fiscal Externalities in an Economic Union Timothy J. Goodspeed Hunter College - CUNY Department of Economics 695 Park Avenue New York, NY 10021 USA Telephone: 212-772-5434 Telefax:

More information

The Substantial Bias from Ignoring General Equilibrium Effects in Estimating Excess Burden, and a Practical Solution

The Substantial Bias from Ignoring General Equilibrium Effects in Estimating Excess Burden, and a Practical Solution The Substantial Bias from Ignoring General Equilibrium Effects in Estimating Excess Burden, and a Practical Solution Lawrence H. Goulder Stanford University and BER Roberton C. Williams III University

More information

Don Fullerton, University of Illinois Garth Heutel, UNC-Greensboro

Don Fullerton, University of Illinois Garth Heutel, UNC-Greensboro Don Fullerton, University of Illinois Garth Heutel, UNC-Greensboro We study two parts of energy policy incidence Uses side: prices of some goods rise relative to others, hurting some people more than others

More information

Extraction capacity and the optimal order of extraction. By: Stephen P. Holland

Extraction capacity and the optimal order of extraction. By: Stephen P. Holland Extraction capacity and the optimal order of extraction By: Stephen P. Holland Holland, Stephen P. (2003) Extraction Capacity and the Optimal Order of Extraction, Journal of Environmental Economics and

More information

Bankruptcy risk and the performance of tradable permit markets. Abstract

Bankruptcy risk and the performance of tradable permit markets. Abstract Bankruptcy risk and the performance of tradable permit markets John Stranlund University of Massachusetts-Amherst Wei Zhang University of Massachusetts-Amherst Abstract We study the impacts of bankruptcy

More information

ECON Micro Foundations

ECON Micro Foundations ECON 302 - Micro Foundations Michael Bar September 13, 2016 Contents 1 Consumer s Choice 2 1.1 Preferences.................................... 2 1.2 Budget Constraint................................ 3

More information

Transport Costs and North-South Trade

Transport Costs and North-South Trade Transport Costs and North-South Trade Didier Laussel a and Raymond Riezman b a GREQAM, University of Aix-Marseille II b Department of Economics, University of Iowa Abstract We develop a simple two country

More information

International Trade in Resource Goods and Returns to Labor in the Non-Resource Sectors

International Trade in Resource Goods and Returns to Labor in the Non-Resource Sectors IIFET 2000 roceedings International Trade in Resource Goods and Returns to Labor in the Non-Resource Sectors Ali Emami Departments of Finance and Economics University of Oregon USA Richard S. ohnston Department

More information

Measuring Sustainability in the UN System of Environmental-Economic Accounting

Measuring Sustainability in the UN System of Environmental-Economic Accounting Measuring Sustainability in the UN System of Environmental-Economic Accounting Kirk Hamilton April 2014 Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment Working Paper No. 154 The Grantham

More information

Perfect competition and intra-industry trade

Perfect competition and intra-industry trade Economics Letters 78 (2003) 101 108 www.elsevier.com/ locate/ econbase Perfect competition and intra-industry trade Jacek Cukrowski a,b, *, Ernest Aksen a University of Finance and Management, Ciepla 40,

More information

Chapter 2 Equilibrium and Efficiency

Chapter 2 Equilibrium and Efficiency Chapter Equilibrium and Efficiency Reading Essential reading Hindriks, J and G.D. Myles Intermediate Public Economics. (Cambridge: MIT Press, 005) Chapter. Further reading Duffie, D. and H. Sonnenschein

More information

ON UNANIMITY AND MONOPOLY POWER

ON UNANIMITY AND MONOPOLY POWER Journal ofbwiness Finance &Accounting, 12(1), Spring 1985, 0306 686X $2.50 ON UNANIMITY AND MONOPOLY POWER VAROUJ A. AIVAZIAN AND JEFFREY L. CALLEN In his comment on the present authors paper (Aivazian

More information

Do high interest rates stem capital outflows?

Do high interest rates stem capital outflows? Economics Letters 67 (2000) 187 192 www.elsevier.com/ locate/ econbase q Do high interest rates stem capital outflows? Michael R. Pakko* Senior Economist, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, 411 Locust

More information

Carbon Taxes, Inequality and Engel's Law - The Double Dividend of Redistribution

Carbon Taxes, Inequality and Engel's Law - The Double Dividend of Redistribution Carbon Taxes, Inequality and Engel's Law - The Double Dividend of Redistribution Climate Future Initiative, Princeton, 16 April 2015 Ottmar Edenhofer, David Klenert, Gregor Schwerhoff, Linus Mattauch Outline

More information

Accrual vs Realization in Capital Gains Taxation

Accrual vs Realization in Capital Gains Taxation Accrual vs Realization in Capital Gains Taxation Giampaolo Arachi University of alento Massimo D Antoni University of iena Preliminary version: May, 06 Abstract Taxation of capital gains upon realization

More information

Aggregation with a double non-convex labor supply decision: indivisible private- and public-sector hours

Aggregation with a double non-convex labor supply decision: indivisible private- and public-sector hours Ekonomia nr 47/2016 123 Ekonomia. Rynek, gospodarka, społeczeństwo 47(2016), s. 123 133 DOI: 10.17451/eko/47/2016/233 ISSN: 0137-3056 www.ekonomia.wne.uw.edu.pl Aggregation with a double non-convex labor

More information

The Private Provision of International Impure Public Goods: the Case of Climate Policy

The Private Provision of International Impure Public Goods: the Case of Climate Policy The Private Provision of International Impure Public Goods: the Case of Climate Policy Martin Altemeyer-Bartscher Dirk T.G. Rübbelke Anil Markandya September 2010 Preliminary Version Please do not cite

More information

University of Victoria. Economics 325 Public Economics SOLUTIONS

University of Victoria. Economics 325 Public Economics SOLUTIONS University of Victoria Economics 325 Public Economics SOLUTIONS Martin Farnham Problem Set #5 Note: Answer each question as clearly and concisely as possible. Use of diagrams, where appropriate, is strongly

More information

1 Fiscal stimulus (Certification exam, 2009) Question (a) Question (b)... 6

1 Fiscal stimulus (Certification exam, 2009) Question (a) Question (b)... 6 Contents 1 Fiscal stimulus (Certification exam, 2009) 2 1.1 Question (a).................................................... 2 1.2 Question (b).................................................... 6 2 Countercyclical

More information

Trade Agreements and the Nature of Price Determination

Trade Agreements and the Nature of Price Determination Trade Agreements and the Nature of Price Determination By POL ANTRÀS AND ROBERT W. STAIGER The terms-of-trade theory of trade agreements holds that governments are attracted to trade agreements as a means

More information

SOPAAN April-Sept. :2014. Green Tax in India

SOPAAN April-Sept. :2014. Green Tax in India Green Tax in India Ms. Manisha Gaur Assistant Professor Post Graduate Govt. College Sector-46, Chandigarh Abstract Tax imposed on the public has two reasons, one is to generate revenue for the Govt. and

More information

Problem Set # Public Economics

Problem Set # Public Economics Problem Set #5 14.41 Public Economics DUE: Dec 3, 2010 1 Tax Distortions This question establishes some basic mathematical ways for thinking about taxation and its relationship to the marginal rate of

More information

Optimal Taxation of Intermediate Goods in the Presence of Externalities: A Survey Towards the Transport Sector

Optimal Taxation of Intermediate Goods in the Presence of Externalities: A Survey Towards the Transport Sector Optimal Taxation of Intermediate Goods in the Presence of Externalities: A Survey Towards the Transport Sector Joakim Ahlberg May 31, 2006 Abstract The paper surveys the literature on optimal taxation

More information

AS/ECON AF Answers to Assignment 1 October Q1. Find the equation of the production possibility curve in the following 2 good, 2 input

AS/ECON AF Answers to Assignment 1 October Q1. Find the equation of the production possibility curve in the following 2 good, 2 input AS/ECON 4070 3.0AF Answers to Assignment 1 October 008 economy. Q1. Find the equation of the production possibility curve in the following good, input Food and clothing are both produced using labour and

More information

Econ 131 Spring 2017 Emmanuel Saez. Problem Set 2. DUE DATE: March 8. Student Name: Student ID: GSI Name:

Econ 131 Spring 2017 Emmanuel Saez. Problem Set 2. DUE DATE: March 8. Student Name: Student ID: GSI Name: Econ 131 Spring 2017 Emmanuel Saez Problem Set 2 DUE DATE: March 8 Student Name: Student ID: GSI Name: You must submit your solutions using this template. Although you may work in groups, each student

More information

Intermediate public economics 5 Externalities Hiroaki Sakamoto

Intermediate public economics 5 Externalities Hiroaki Sakamoto Intermediate public economics 5 Externalities Hiroaki Sakamoto June 12, 2015 Contents 1. Externalities 2.1 Definition 2.2 Real-world examples 2. Modeling externalities 2.1 Pure-exchange economy a) example

More information

Problem set 5. Asset pricing. Markus Roth. Chair for Macroeconomics Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz. Juli 5, 2010

Problem set 5. Asset pricing. Markus Roth. Chair for Macroeconomics Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz. Juli 5, 2010 Problem set 5 Asset pricing Markus Roth Chair for Macroeconomics Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz Juli 5, 200 Markus Roth (Macroeconomics 2) Problem set 5 Juli 5, 200 / 40 Contents Problem 5 of problem

More information

Module 10. Lecture 37

Module 10. Lecture 37 Module 10 Lecture 37 Topics 10.21 Optimal Commodity Taxation 10.22 Optimal Tax Theory: Ramsey Rule 10.23 Ramsey Model 10.24 Ramsey Rule to Inverse Elasticity Rule 10.25 Ramsey Problem 10.26 Ramsey Rule:

More information

Public Good Provision Rules and Income Distribution: Some General Equilibrium Calculations

Public Good Provision Rules and Income Distribution: Some General Equilibrium Calculations empec (11) 16:25-33 Public Good Provision Rules and Income Distribution: Some General Equilibrium Calculations By J. Piggott I and J. Whalley 2 Abstract: A central issue in the analysis of public goods

More information

EC330 Study Guide II Spring 2010 R. Congleton Public Finance GMU

EC330 Study Guide II Spring 2010 R. Congleton Public Finance GMU EC330 Study Guide II Spring 2010 R. Congleton Public Finance GMU 1. Identify and/or Define the following: a. pure public good j. voting paradox b. externality k. rational ignorance c. club good l. fiscal

More information

Chapter 4 Topics. Behavior of the representative consumer Behavior of the representative firm Pearson Education, Inc.

Chapter 4 Topics. Behavior of the representative consumer Behavior of the representative firm Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 4 Topics Behavior of the representative consumer Behavior of the representative firm 1-1 Representative Consumer Consumer s preferences over consumption and leisure as represented by indifference

More information

FINANCE THEORY: Intertemporal. and Optimal Firm Investment Decisions. Eric Zivot Econ 422 Summer R.W.Parks/E. Zivot ECON 422:Fisher 1.

FINANCE THEORY: Intertemporal. and Optimal Firm Investment Decisions. Eric Zivot Econ 422 Summer R.W.Parks/E. Zivot ECON 422:Fisher 1. FINANCE THEORY: Intertemporal Consumption-Saving and Optimal Firm Investment Decisions Eric Zivot Econ 422 Summer 21 ECON 422:Fisher 1 Reading PCBR, Chapter 1 (general overview of financial decision making)

More information

Answers to Microeconomics Prelim of August 24, In practice, firms often price their products by marking up a fixed percentage over (average)

Answers to Microeconomics Prelim of August 24, In practice, firms often price their products by marking up a fixed percentage over (average) Answers to Microeconomics Prelim of August 24, 2016 1. In practice, firms often price their products by marking up a fixed percentage over (average) cost. To investigate the consequences of markup pricing,

More information

Environmental Tax Reform: Efficiency and Political Feasibility

Environmental Tax Reform: Efficiency and Political Feasibility Institute for Empirical Research in Economics University of Zurich Working Paper Series ISSN 1424-0459 Working Paper No. 13 Environmental Tax Reform: Efficiency and Political Feasibility Stefan Felder

More information

Problem Set VI: Edgeworth Box

Problem Set VI: Edgeworth Box Problem Set VI: Edgeworth Box Paolo Crosetto paolo.crosetto@unimi.it DEAS - University of Milan Exercises solved in class on March 15th, 2010 Recap: pure exchange The simplest model of a general equilibrium

More information

Sam Bucovetsky und Andreas Haufler: Preferential tax regimes with asymmetric countries

Sam Bucovetsky und Andreas Haufler: Preferential tax regimes with asymmetric countries Sam Bucovetsky und Andreas Haufler: Preferential tax regimes with asymmetric countries Munich Discussion Paper No. 2006-30 Department of Economics University of Munich Volkswirtschaftliche Fakultät Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität

More information

Tax Reform and the Environment in Developing Economies: Is a Double Dividend Possible?

Tax Reform and the Environment in Developing Economies: Is a Double Dividend Possible? Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei Tax Reform and the Environment in Developing Economies: Is a Double Dividend Possible? Ian Coxhead NOTA DI LAVORO 88.2000 Corso Magenta, 63, 20123 Milano, tel. +39/02/52036934

More information

The Ramsey Model. Lectures 11 to 14. Topics in Macroeconomics. November 10, 11, 24 & 25, 2008

The Ramsey Model. Lectures 11 to 14. Topics in Macroeconomics. November 10, 11, 24 & 25, 2008 The Ramsey Model Lectures 11 to 14 Topics in Macroeconomics November 10, 11, 24 & 25, 2008 Lecture 11, 12, 13 & 14 1/50 Topics in Macroeconomics The Ramsey Model: Introduction 2 Main Ingredients Neoclassical

More information

Does Encourage Inward FDI Always Be a Dominant Strategy for Domestic Government? A Theoretical Analysis of Vertically Differentiated Industry

Does Encourage Inward FDI Always Be a Dominant Strategy for Domestic Government? A Theoretical Analysis of Vertically Differentiated Industry Lin, Journal of International and Global Economic Studies, 7(2), December 2014, 17-31 17 Does Encourage Inward FDI Always Be a Dominant Strategy for Domestic Government? A Theoretical Analysis of Vertically

More information

Chapter 9 The IS LM FE Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis

Chapter 9 The IS LM FE Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis Chapter 9 The IS LM FE Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis The main goal of Chapter 8 was to describe business cycles by presenting the business cycle facts. This and the following three

More information

Environmental taxation in a federal system of government with equalization payments

Environmental taxation in a federal system of government with equalization payments Environmental taxation in a federal system of government with equalization payments Jean-Denis Garon and Charles Séguin October 15, 2014 Draft. Please do not quote or circulate. Abstract We evaluate the

More information

Discounting the Benefits of Climate Change Policies Using Uncertain Rates

Discounting the Benefits of Climate Change Policies Using Uncertain Rates Discounting the Benefits of Climate Change Policies Using Uncertain Rates Richard Newell and William Pizer Evaluating environmental policies, such as the mitigation of greenhouse gases, frequently requires

More information

IS FINANCIAL REPRESSION REALLY BAD? Eun Young OH Durham Univeristy 17 Sidegate, Durham, United Kingdom

IS FINANCIAL REPRESSION REALLY BAD? Eun Young OH Durham Univeristy 17 Sidegate, Durham, United Kingdom IS FINANCIAL REPRESSION REALLY BAD? Eun Young OH Durham Univeristy 17 Sidegate, Durham, United Kingdom E-mail: e.y.oh@durham.ac.uk Abstract This paper examines the relationship between reserve requirements,

More information

1 Ricardian Neutrality of Fiscal Policy

1 Ricardian Neutrality of Fiscal Policy 1 Ricardian Neutrality of Fiscal Policy We start our analysis of fiscal policy by stating a neutrality result for fiscal policy which is due to David Ricardo (1817), and whose formal illustration is due

More information

= = = = = = = = = = = = LEADING IN THOUGHT AND ACTION

= = = = = = = = = = = = LEADING IN THOUGHT AND ACTION Product Number WP 2007-1 May 31, 2007 From the Office of Tax Policy Research WORKING PAPER SERIES Excess Burden of Taxation by James R. Hines Jr. University of Michigan and NBER The Office of Tax Policy

More information

A Course in Environmental Economics: Theory, Policy, and Practice. Daniel J. Phaneuf and Till Requate

A Course in Environmental Economics: Theory, Policy, and Practice. Daniel J. Phaneuf and Till Requate 1 A Course in Environmental Economics: Theory, Policy, and Practice PART I: ECONOMICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT Daniel J. Phaneuf and Till Requate 1. Introduction to the Theory of Externalities 1.1 Market failure

More information

AK and reduced-form AK models. Consumption taxation.

AK and reduced-form AK models. Consumption taxation. Chapter 11 AK and reduced-form AK models. Consumption taxation. In his Chapter 11 Acemoglu discusses simple fully-endogenous growth models in the form of Ramsey-style AK and reduced-form AK models, respectively.

More information

THE OPTIMUM QUANTITY OF MONEY RULE IN THE THEORY OF PUBLIC FINANCE. Kent P. KIMBROUGH*

THE OPTIMUM QUANTITY OF MONEY RULE IN THE THEORY OF PUBLIC FINANCE. Kent P. KIMBROUGH* Journal of Monetary Economics 18 (1986) 277-284. North-Holland THE OPTIMUM QUANTITY OF MONEY RULE IN THE THEORY OF PUBLIC FINANCE Kent P. KIMBROUGH* Duke Unioersip, Durham. NC -77706, USA This paper examines

More information

Expansion of Network Integrations: Two Scenarios, Trade Patterns, and Welfare

Expansion of Network Integrations: Two Scenarios, Trade Patterns, and Welfare Journal of Economic Integration 20(4), December 2005; 631-643 Expansion of Network Integrations: Two Scenarios, Trade Patterns, and Welfare Noritsugu Nakanishi Kobe University Toru Kikuchi Kobe University

More information

Distortionary Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy Goals

Distortionary Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy Goals Distortionary Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy Goals Klaus Adam and Roberto M. Billi Sveriges Riksbank Working Paper Series No. xxx October 213 Abstract We reconsider the role of an inflation conservative

More information

(Note: Please label your diagram clearly.) Answer: Denote by Q p and Q m the quantity of pizzas and movies respectively.

(Note: Please label your diagram clearly.) Answer: Denote by Q p and Q m the quantity of pizzas and movies respectively. 1. Suppose the consumer has a utility function U(Q x, Q y ) = Q x Q y, where Q x and Q y are the quantity of good x and quantity of good y respectively. Assume his income is I and the prices of the two

More information

output and employment, and as,+n for fiscal, tit

output and employment, and as,+n for fiscal, tit j :,y #,,,;,;- Abstr&c< ',>I, L. -,&"?fi. The European Commission and U.S. Governi$ent have propose rgy taxes ~q:; ; as an effective tax instrument for achieving;:,&acroeconomic obj ves of ;,q*.,.. ; output

More information

International Trade in Emission Permits

International Trade in Emission Permits International Trade in Emission Permits Jota Ishikawa Hitotsubashi University Kazuharu Kiyono Waseda University Morihiro Yomogida Sophia University August 31, 2006 Abstract This paper examines the effect

More information

FISCAL FEDERALISM WITH A SINGLE INSTRUMENT TO FINANCE GOVERNMENT. Carlos Maravall Rodríguez 1

FISCAL FEDERALISM WITH A SINGLE INSTRUMENT TO FINANCE GOVERNMENT. Carlos Maravall Rodríguez 1 Working Paper 05-22 Economics Series 13 April 2005 Departamento de Economía Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Calle Madrid, 126 28903 Getafe (Spain) Fax (34) 91 624 98 75 FISCAL FEDERALISM WITH A SINGLE

More information