This paper re-considers environmental subsidies in the context where pol-luting firms procure their abatement goods and services from a specialized oligopoly. In order to maximize social welfare, a regulator must then simul-taneously alleviate two distortions: one that comes from pollution and the other that is due to the environment firms ’ market power. We find that the combination of an emission tax and a subsidy to polluters cannot achieve the first-best, while the opposite positive conclusion obtains if the subsidy is granted instead to environment firms. When public transfers are themselves subject to distortions, however, welfare may be higher if only an emission tax is used
Abstract The paper studies the use of emission taxes and feed-in subsidies for the regulation of a m...
This paper considers the welfare and policy implications of a merger between environment fi rms (i.e...
It is widely expected that the recent trend (in the USA, EU and elsewhere) towards an increased role...
This paper re-considers environmental subsidies in the context where polluting firms procure their a...
This paper considers the combination of pollution taxes and abatement subsidies when some polluting ...
This paper establishes a cross-industry pollution externality model. To explain a benevolent governm...
Governments support particular rms or sectors by granting low interest nancing, re-duced regulation,...
The paper studies the use of emission taxes and feed-in subsidies for the regulation of a monopoly t...
This research examines the role of the abatement subsidy as a potential environmental policy option ...
Because of difficulties measuring pollution, many prior papers suggest a subsidy to some observable ...
This paper reexamines the Poyago-Theotoky model and provides additional investigation that was condu...
AbstractThis article investigates environmental regulations on eco-industry in vertical oligopolies,...
This paper considers a market with an incumbent monopolistic firm and a potential entrant. Productio...
Beladi and Chao (2006) and Bárcena-Ruiz and Garzón (2006) considered the role of environmental polic...
International audienceThis paper re-examines environmental regulation, under the assumption that pol...
Abstract The paper studies the use of emission taxes and feed-in subsidies for the regulation of a m...
This paper considers the welfare and policy implications of a merger between environment fi rms (i.e...
It is widely expected that the recent trend (in the USA, EU and elsewhere) towards an increased role...
This paper re-considers environmental subsidies in the context where polluting firms procure their a...
This paper considers the combination of pollution taxes and abatement subsidies when some polluting ...
This paper establishes a cross-industry pollution externality model. To explain a benevolent governm...
Governments support particular rms or sectors by granting low interest nancing, re-duced regulation,...
The paper studies the use of emission taxes and feed-in subsidies for the regulation of a monopoly t...
This research examines the role of the abatement subsidy as a potential environmental policy option ...
Because of difficulties measuring pollution, many prior papers suggest a subsidy to some observable ...
This paper reexamines the Poyago-Theotoky model and provides additional investigation that was condu...
AbstractThis article investigates environmental regulations on eco-industry in vertical oligopolies,...
This paper considers a market with an incumbent monopolistic firm and a potential entrant. Productio...
Beladi and Chao (2006) and Bárcena-Ruiz and Garzón (2006) considered the role of environmental polic...
International audienceThis paper re-examines environmental regulation, under the assumption that pol...
Abstract The paper studies the use of emission taxes and feed-in subsidies for the regulation of a m...
This paper considers the welfare and policy implications of a merger between environment fi rms (i.e...
It is widely expected that the recent trend (in the USA, EU and elsewhere) towards an increased role...