Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are an alternative to the current method of achieving environmental benefits which restricts farming practices in exchange for deficiency payments. This article presents a voluntary green payment program using the principles of mechanism design under asymmetric information. Information asymmetry arises because the government knows only the distribution of farmers\u27 production situations, rather than farm-specific information. The program is demonstrated with irrigated corn production in the Oklahoma high plains. A green payment program can reduce budget costs and pollution, while increasing the net social value of corn production
This study investigates the environmental impacts of several forms of policies that offer farmers su...
Many conservation programs offer financial compensation to farmers in exchange for socially desired ...
This article proposes a method to accommodate asymmetric information on farmers’ risk preferences in...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, have ...
We use a mechanism design framework to analyze the optimal design of green payment policies with the...
This paper analyzes the efficient design of green payments. Green payments can generate environmenta...
A model of a voluntary "green" payment program is developed to control nitrate leaching and runoff f...
We investigate the environmental impacts of several forms of policies that offer farmers subsides in...
"Designing Green Support Programs" is the second in a series of reports on Green Support Programs fr...
Two policy goals dominate United States' agricultural programs: voluntary land retirement for enviro...
The traditional approach to improving the environmental performance of U.S. agriculture has been to ...
This paper addresses the potential of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program to become the fir...
This study investigates the environmental impacts of several forms of policies that offer farmers su...
Many conservation programs offer financial compensation to farmers in exchange for socially desired ...
This article proposes a method to accommodate asymmetric information on farmers’ risk preferences in...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, are a...
Green payment programs, where the government pays farmers directly for environmental benefits, have ...
We use a mechanism design framework to analyze the optimal design of green payment policies with the...
This paper analyzes the efficient design of green payments. Green payments can generate environmenta...
A model of a voluntary "green" payment program is developed to control nitrate leaching and runoff f...
We investigate the environmental impacts of several forms of policies that offer farmers subsides in...
"Designing Green Support Programs" is the second in a series of reports on Green Support Programs fr...
Two policy goals dominate United States' agricultural programs: voluntary land retirement for enviro...
The traditional approach to improving the environmental performance of U.S. agriculture has been to ...
This paper addresses the potential of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program to become the fir...
This study investigates the environmental impacts of several forms of policies that offer farmers su...
Many conservation programs offer financial compensation to farmers in exchange for socially desired ...
This article proposes a method to accommodate asymmetric information on farmers’ risk preferences in...