This paper presents a model of imperfect international competition. Within this framework, the optimal choice of national environmental policy instrument and international emissions trading scheme is discussed. The choice of national instrument is restricted to absolute and relative standards, which form the basis for permit and credit trading respectively. It is shown that relatives standards and credit trading lead to higher output than emission ceilings and permit trading. I find that governments want to increase production beyond the level reached with emission ceilings and therefore prefer relative standards. Furthermore, international emissions trading is only optimal when the country imports emission quotas, and in several cases, gov...
In a non-cooperative strategic environmental regulation, unilateral regulation may yield the so-call...
This paper considers the coordination of domestic markets for tradable emission permits where countr...
This paper illustrates that an international permit trading system may hurt relatively poor countrie...
This paper presents a model of imperfect international competition. Within this framework, the optim...
Emissions trading can be organized in several ways. In particular, private emissions trading can be ...
Abstract niet beschikbaarInternational emissions trading between private parties established in Anne...
This paper compares emissions trading based on a cap on total emissions (permit trading) and on rela...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the implications of the distribution of emission permits related to a ...
Emissions trading is a hot issue. At national as well as supranational levels, proposals for introdu...
I examine emission policy in a union of countries when production in any country incurs emissions th...
This paper explores governments’ optimal intervention policies under imperfectly competitive interna...
This paper examines the interdependence between imperfect competition and emissions trading. We part...
URL des Cahiers :http://mse.univ-paris1.fr/MSEFramCahier2005.htmCahiers de la Maison des Sciences Ec...
URL des Cahiers : https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/CAHIERS-MSECahiers de la MSE 2005.11 - Série V...
Abstract: Linkage of different countries’ domestic permit markets for pollution rights into a single...
In a non-cooperative strategic environmental regulation, unilateral regulation may yield the so-call...
This paper considers the coordination of domestic markets for tradable emission permits where countr...
This paper illustrates that an international permit trading system may hurt relatively poor countrie...
This paper presents a model of imperfect international competition. Within this framework, the optim...
Emissions trading can be organized in several ways. In particular, private emissions trading can be ...
Abstract niet beschikbaarInternational emissions trading between private parties established in Anne...
This paper compares emissions trading based on a cap on total emissions (permit trading) and on rela...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the implications of the distribution of emission permits related to a ...
Emissions trading is a hot issue. At national as well as supranational levels, proposals for introdu...
I examine emission policy in a union of countries when production in any country incurs emissions th...
This paper explores governments’ optimal intervention policies under imperfectly competitive interna...
This paper examines the interdependence between imperfect competition and emissions trading. We part...
URL des Cahiers :http://mse.univ-paris1.fr/MSEFramCahier2005.htmCahiers de la Maison des Sciences Ec...
URL des Cahiers : https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/CAHIERS-MSECahiers de la MSE 2005.11 - Série V...
Abstract: Linkage of different countries’ domestic permit markets for pollution rights into a single...
In a non-cooperative strategic environmental regulation, unilateral regulation may yield the so-call...
This paper considers the coordination of domestic markets for tradable emission permits where countr...
This paper illustrates that an international permit trading system may hurt relatively poor countrie...