We explore the efficacy of price and quantity controls as environmental policy instruments in a stochastic setting in which agents are risk averse. We demonstrate that the assumption of risk aversion may improve the performance of a tax relative to that of a system of tradable quotas, and that restricting quota trade may enhance efficiency even though risk aversion in itself limits volumes of trade. The government may be able to improve the performance of a tradable quota system by judicious choice of distribution and amount of initial quotas and by trading pro-actively in the quota market.regulation; effluent taxes; tradable quotas; uncertainty; risk aversion; environmental management
This paper examines the linking of price-based and quantity-based provision of a public good by two ...
According to theoretical arguments, a properly designed emission trading system should help reaching...
Speculators are active in large markets for emission permits such as those developing under the Kyot...
We compare two tradable permit markets in their ability to meet a stated environmental target at lea...
A well-known feature of pollution control with tradable quota rights is that the benefits to ownersh...
In perfectly competitive markets taxes and quotas are fully equivalent measures for environmental pr...
This paper examines the linking of price-based and quantity-based provision of a public good by two...
We study a situation in which two goods jointly generate an externality but onlyone of them is regul...
Briseid Storrøsten, H. Price versus tradable quantity regulation. Uncertainty and endogenous technol...
Abstract: This paper shows that tradable emissions permits and an emissions tax have a risk-related ...
We consider an industry with firms that produce a final good emitting pollution to different degree ...
This paper takes on the issue of ‘Prices vs. Quantities’, see Weitzman (1974), applied to environmen...
The present work is concerned with stochastic modelling of markets for regulated resources. Here, we...
Speculators are active in large markets for emission permits such as those developing under the Kyot...
This paper explores the role of uncertainty, in the form of measurement error, in pollution regulati...
This paper examines the linking of price-based and quantity-based provision of a public good by two ...
According to theoretical arguments, a properly designed emission trading system should help reaching...
Speculators are active in large markets for emission permits such as those developing under the Kyot...
We compare two tradable permit markets in their ability to meet a stated environmental target at lea...
A well-known feature of pollution control with tradable quota rights is that the benefits to ownersh...
In perfectly competitive markets taxes and quotas are fully equivalent measures for environmental pr...
This paper examines the linking of price-based and quantity-based provision of a public good by two...
We study a situation in which two goods jointly generate an externality but onlyone of them is regul...
Briseid Storrøsten, H. Price versus tradable quantity regulation. Uncertainty and endogenous technol...
Abstract: This paper shows that tradable emissions permits and an emissions tax have a risk-related ...
We consider an industry with firms that produce a final good emitting pollution to different degree ...
This paper takes on the issue of ‘Prices vs. Quantities’, see Weitzman (1974), applied to environmen...
The present work is concerned with stochastic modelling of markets for regulated resources. Here, we...
Speculators are active in large markets for emission permits such as those developing under the Kyot...
This paper explores the role of uncertainty, in the form of measurement error, in pollution regulati...
This paper examines the linking of price-based and quantity-based provision of a public good by two ...
According to theoretical arguments, a properly designed emission trading system should help reaching...
Speculators are active in large markets for emission permits such as those developing under the Kyot...