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Three essays on Environmental Economics and Industrial Organization: Tradable Permits, Environmental R&D and Taxation.

机译:关于环境经济学和产业组织的三篇论文:可交易许可证,环境研发和税收。

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Chapter 1: Tradable Permits under Environmental and Cost-reducing R&D: This chapter models simultaneous investments in both environmental and cost-reducing R&D by asymmetric Cournot duopolist. Pollution rights (emission permits) are allocated by the regulator and can be traded between firms. Both R&D competition and cooperation are considered. In a three-stage game, firms first invest in R&D, then trade permits, and then compete in output. The strategic interaction between different types of R&D investments is analyzed. It is found that giving more permits to one firm induces it to conduct more cost-reducing but less environmental R&D. The second-best optimal allocation of pollution rights is also analyzed. This allocation matters for social welfare under R&D competition, but is irrelevant under R&D cooperation. Moreover, the optimal allocation depends on R&D spillovers. This paper also studies the grandfathering of permits based on historical output. Compared with the second-best optimal allocation, the higher the emissions reduction level, the more likely that grandfathering allocates too few permits to the large firm and too many permits to the small firm. Adding an R&D budget constraint leads firms to under-invest in cost-reducing R&D relative to environmental R&D.;Chapter 2: Tradable Permits under Environmental R&D between Upstream and Downstream Industries: This chapter models the simultaneous investments in environmental R&D by both downstream and upstream industries, with two symmetric firms within each industry competing à la Cournot. Pollution rights are allocated by the regulator, and firms can trade permits. R&D competition, intra-industry (horizontal), inter-industry (vertical) and both intra- and inter-industry (generalized) R&D cooperations are considered. In a four-stage game, firms first invest in R&D, then trade permits, then upstream firms compete in intermediate good production, and finally downstream firms compete in final food production. The strategic interactions between R&D investments are analyzed. It is found that an increase in either vertical or horizontal R&D spillovers reduce the permit price but increase production, but the spillover effects on R&D investments are ambiguous and they depend on the number of permits that a firm receives from the government. However, firms undertake more R&D under generalized cooperation than vertical cooperation, irrespective of spillovers and the allocation of permits, and this results in higher social welfare under generalized cooperation than vertical cooperation. The optimal allocation of pollution rights by the regulator is also considered. This allocation matters for social welfare under R&D competition and horizontal cooperation, but is irrelevant under vertical and generalized cooperations.;Chapter 3: Is There a Principle of Targeting in Environmental Taxation?: This chapter studies whether the "principle of targeting", which is referred to by Dixit (1985) as the tax formulae for dirty goods have "additivity property" (Sandmo 1975) and externality-generating sources should be directly targeted (Bhagwati and Johnson 1960), can be applicable in the presence of a uniform commodity tax with an additional emissions tax. We consider three perfectly competitive markets, one of them produces a non-polluting good and the other two produce polluting goods. The regulator chooses optimal taxes on all three markets to maximize social welfare and finances an exogenous public expenditure. First all, it is found that the additivity property does not hold under differentiated taxes, and is even further weakened with a uniform commodity tax. It is also shown that the Pigouvian tax is unlikely to apply on the top of the uniform commodity tax. Furthermore, if there is only tax instrument available -- i.e. either the uniform commodity tax or the missions tax -- then the uniform commodity tax (emissions tax) induces higher social welfare when marginal social damage is low (high).
机译:第1章:环境和降低成本的R&D下的可交易许可证:本章模拟了不对称古诺(Dourpolist)垄断者在环境和降低成本R&D上的同时投资。污染权(排放许可)由监管机构分配,可以在企业之间进行交易。研发竞争与合作都需要考虑。在三个阶段的博弈中,企业首先投资于研发,然后获得贸易许可,然后竞争产出。分析了不同类型的R&D投资之间的战略互动。结果发现,给一家公司更多的许可会促使它进行更多的降低成本的活动,但减少了对环境的研发。还分析了排污权次优的最佳分配。这种分配对于研发竞争下的社会福利很重要,但在研发合作下却无关紧要。此外,最优分配取决于研发溢出效应。本文还根据历史数据研究许可证的祖先。与次优的最佳分配相比,减排水平越高,祖父分配给大企业的许可证越少,而给小企业分配的许可证越多。增加研发预算约束导致企业在降低成本的研发方面相对于环境研发投入不足;第二章:上游和下游产业之间在环境研发方面的可交易许可证:本章模拟了上游和下游在环境研发方面的同时投资行业,每个行业中有两家对称企业在古诺竞争。污染权由监管机构分配,企业可以交易许可证。进行研发竞争,行业内(水平),行业间(垂直)以及行业内和行业间(广义)研发合作。在四个阶段的博弈中,企业首先投资于研发,然后是贸易许可,然后上游企业竞争中间产品生产,最后下游企业竞争最终食品生产。分析了研发投资之间的战略互动。研究发现,垂直或水平R&D溢出的增加会降低许可价格,但会增加产量,但是溢出对R&D投资的影响是模棱两可的,并且取决于企业从政府获得的许可数量。但是,与溢出和许可证分配无关,企业在广义合作下进行的研发要多于纵向合作,这导致广义合作下的社会福利要高于纵向合作。还考虑了监管机构对污染权的最佳分配。这种分配对于研发竞争和横向合作下的社会福利很重要,但在纵向和广义合作下却无关紧要。第三章:环境税中有针对性原则吗?:本章研究“针对性原则”是否为被Dixit(1985)称为肮脏商品的税收公式具有“加性”(Sandmo 1975),应直接针对产生外部性的来源(Bhagwati和Johnson 1960),可以在存在统一商品税的情况下适用加上额外的排放税。我们考虑了三个完全竞争的市场,其中一个生产无污染的商品,另外两个生产有污染的商品。监管机构在所有三个市场上选择最佳税收,以最大程度地提高社会福利并为外部公共支出提供资金。首先,发现可加性在差异税下不成立,甚至在统一商品税下进一步削弱。还表明,在统一商品税的基础上不太可能适用庇古税。此外,如果只有可用的税收工具-即统一商品税或任务税-那么当边际社会损害较低(高)时,统一商品税(排放税)会带来更高的社会福利。

著录项

  • 作者

    Liu, Jianqiao.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Ottawa (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 University of Ottawa (Canada).;
  • 学科 Economics General.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 144 p.
  • 总页数 144
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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