The implications of transactions costs for the performance of water pollution trading involving point and nonpoint sources are examined. The analysis focuses on the impacts of transaction costs on different classes of trading partners and its consequence on the trading equilibrium. The model of point-nonpoint water pollution trading in the context of the total maximum daily loads explicitly incorporates transactions costs for both buying and selling exchanges of nonpoint source and point source permits. Transactions costs unarguably reduce the optimal level of trades in both types of permits compared to the costless trade case
Point-nonpoint trading markets must accommodate the problem of monitoring individual nonpoint source...
This study reflects a growing interest in water quality trading involving both point and nonpoint so...
A trading ratio is required for water quality trading that involves nonpoint sources to compensate f...
The implications of transactions costs for the performance of water pollution trading involving poin...
There is considerable interest in the use of pollution trading between point and nonpoint sources t...
Transaction costs are commonly identified as a major reason why so few point/nonpoint trades have oc...
In programs for trading pollution abatement between point and nonpoint sources, the trading ratio sp...
This paper investigates the economic and environmental cost-effectiveness of two point-nonpoint sour...
This paper examines how water quality trading interacts with nonpoint-source abatement-cost sharing ...
We compare two tradable permit markets in their ability to meet a stated environmental target at lea...
In the past decades, little abatement efforts have been implemented on China's non-point source...
Water pollution from non‐point sources is a global environmental concern. Economists propose tradab...
In the past decades, little abatement efforts have been implemented on China's non-point source...
Abstract. While there is substantial evidence that nonpoint sources have lower nutrient reduction co...
The lack of widespread success in existing water quality trading programs may be attributed, in part...
Point-nonpoint trading markets must accommodate the problem of monitoring individual nonpoint source...
This study reflects a growing interest in water quality trading involving both point and nonpoint so...
A trading ratio is required for water quality trading that involves nonpoint sources to compensate f...
The implications of transactions costs for the performance of water pollution trading involving poin...
There is considerable interest in the use of pollution trading between point and nonpoint sources t...
Transaction costs are commonly identified as a major reason why so few point/nonpoint trades have oc...
In programs for trading pollution abatement between point and nonpoint sources, the trading ratio sp...
This paper investigates the economic and environmental cost-effectiveness of two point-nonpoint sour...
This paper examines how water quality trading interacts with nonpoint-source abatement-cost sharing ...
We compare two tradable permit markets in their ability to meet a stated environmental target at lea...
In the past decades, little abatement efforts have been implemented on China's non-point source...
Water pollution from non‐point sources is a global environmental concern. Economists propose tradab...
In the past decades, little abatement efforts have been implemented on China's non-point source...
Abstract. While there is substantial evidence that nonpoint sources have lower nutrient reduction co...
The lack of widespread success in existing water quality trading programs may be attributed, in part...
Point-nonpoint trading markets must accommodate the problem of monitoring individual nonpoint source...
This study reflects a growing interest in water quality trading involving both point and nonpoint so...
A trading ratio is required for water quality trading that involves nonpoint sources to compensate f...