Lecture 7: Externalities: Stefanie Stantcheva
Lecture 7: Externalities: Stefanie Stantcheva
Stefanie Stantcheva
Fall 2017
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OUTLINE
Second part of course is going to cover market failures and show how
government interventions can help
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EXTERNALITIES
Market failure: A problem that violates one of the assumptions of the 1st
welfare theorem and causes the market economy to deliver an outcome
that does not maximize efficiency
Externality example: a steel plant that pollutes a river used for recreation
Not an externality example: a steel plant uses more electricity and bids up
the price of electricity for other electricity customers
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EXTERNALITY THEORY: ECONOMICS OF NEGATIVE PRODUCTION
EXTERNALITIES
Social marginal cost (SMC = PMC + MD): The private marginal cost to
producers plus marginal damage
Example: steel plant pollutes a river but plant does not face any pollution
regulation (and hence ignores pollution when deciding how much to
produce)
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.1
Economics of Negative Production Externalities:
Steel Production
Price of
steel Social marginal cost,
SMC = PMC + MD
Deadweight loss
S = Private marginal
cost, PMC
B
C
$100 = Marginal
P1 A damage, MD
D = Private marginal
benefit, PMB = Social
marginal benefit, SMB
Q2 Q1 Quantity of steel
Overproduction
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EXTERNALITY THEORY: ECONOMICS OF NEGATIVE
CONSUMPTION EXTERNALITIES
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.1
APPLICATION: The Externality of SUVs
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Externality Theory: Positive Externalities
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.1
Externality Theory
Positive Externalities
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Externality Theory: Market Outcome is Inefficient
With a free market, quantity and price are such that PMB = PMC
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Private-Sector Solutions to Negative Externalities
Key question raised by Ronald Coase (famous Nobel Prize winner Chicago
libertarian economist):
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PRIVATE-SECTOR SOLUTIONS TO NEGATIVE EXTERNALITIES:
COASE THEOREM
Coase Theorem (Part I): When there are well-defined property rights and
costless bargaining, then negotiations between the party creating the
externality and the party affected by the externality can bring about the
socially optimal market quantity.
Coase Theorem (Part II): The efficient quantity for a good producing an
externality does not depend on which party is assigned the property rights,
as long as someone is assigned those rights.
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COASE THEOREM EXAMPLE
Why price pollution at MD? If price is above MD, individuals would want to sell an
extra unit of pollution, so price must fall. MD is the equilibrium efficient price in
the newly created pollution market.
2) Firms own river: If river is owned by firms then firm can charge
individuals for polluting less. They will also charge individuals the MD per
unit of pollution reduction.
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PROBLEMS WITH COASIAN SOLUTION
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PROBLEMS WITH COASIAN SOLUTION: BOTTOM LINE
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Public Sector Remedies For Externalities
Public policy makers employ two types of remedies to resolve the problems
associated with negative externalities:
1) price policy: corrective tax or subsidy equal to marginal damage per unit
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.3
Corrective Taxation
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.3
Corrective Subsidies
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PUBLIC SECTOR REMEDIES FOR EXTERNALITIES: REGULATION
In practice, there are complications that may make taxes a more effective
means of addressing externalities.
The only way to reduce an externality, e.g., pollution, is not to cut down on
production. Think of a “pollution reduction” technology (many examples).
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.4
Distinctions Between Price and Quantity Approaches
to Addressing Externalities: Basic Model
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MODEL WITH HETEROGENEOUS COSTS
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Quantity Regulation with Trading Permits
Suppose start with quantity regulation q0H = q0L = 1/2 and allow firms to
trade pollution reductions as long as q H + q L = 1
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CORRECTIVE TAXES VS. TRADABLE PERMITS
Two differences between corrective taxes and tradable permits (carbon tax vs.
cap-and-trade in the case of CO2 emissions)
If the government gives them to current firms for free, this is like the tax + large
transfer to initial polluting firms.
Taxes preferable when MD curve is flat. Tradable permits are preferable when MD
curve is steep.
If critical to minimize costs → set tax (cost will be limited to the tax).
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.4
Uncertainty About Costs of Reduction:
Case 1: Flat MD Curve (Global Warming)
Cost of
pollution
reduction ($) MC2
A
C1 MC1
DWL1
D B
DWL2
t = C2
E C
MD = SMB
Reduction 0 R3 R2 R1 Rfull
Pollution Pfull P3 P2 P1 0
Mandated
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CHAPTER 5 ■ EXTERNALITIES: PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
5.4
Uncertainty About Costs of Reduction:
Case 2: Steep MD Curve (Nuclear leakage)
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Empirical Example: Acid Rain and Health
1970 Clean Air Act: Landmark federal legislation that first regulated acid
rain-causing emissions by setting maximum standards for atmospheric
concentrations of various substances, including SO2 .
SO2 allowance system: The feature of the 1990 amendments to the Clean
Air Act that granted plants permits to emit SO2 in limited quantities and
allowed them to trade those permits.
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Empirical Example: Effects of Clean Air Act of 1970
Problem: Areas with more particulates may differ from areas with fewer
particulates in many other ways, not just in the amount of particulates in
the air
Chay and Greenstone (2003) use clean air act of 1970 to resolve the
causality problem:
Compares infant mortality across 2 types of places before and after (DD
approach) 41
Figure 2: Trends in TSPs Pollution and Infant Mortality, by 1972 Nonattainment Status
110
100
Mean of Average Daily Readings
(Micrograms per Cubic Meter)
90
80
70
60
50
1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974
Year
2100
2000
1900
Internal Infant Mortality Rate
(per 100,000 Live Births)
1800
1700
1600
1500
1400
1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974
Year
Nonattainment Attainment
2) Irreversible: Atmospheric CO2 has long life (35% remains after 100
years) [absent carbon capture tech breakthrough]
1) Sea rise which will flood low lying coasts and major population centers
(e.g., Miami, Florida; value of real estate subject to regular flooding has
dropped)
demand for food is very inelastic in the short-run ⇒ Spikes in prices if ag output
falls ⇒ disruption/famines possible in low income countries
4) Droughts and heat waves will make many places less livable
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Empirical Example: Costs of Global Warming
1) The mortality effect of an extremely hot day (80o F+) declined by about
75% between 1900-1959 and 1960-2004.
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Figure 2: Estimated Temperature-Mortality Relationship (Continued)
(c) 1929-1959
0.04 0.03
Log Monthly Mortality Rate
0.00 0.01 0.02
-0.01
<10 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 >90
Daily Average Temperature (F)
(d) 1960-2004
0.04 0.03
Log Monthly Mortality Rate
0.00 0.01 0.02
-0.01
<10 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 >90
Daily Average Temperature (F)
Notes: Figure 2 plots the response function between log monthly mortality rate and average daily temperatures,
obtained by fitting Equation (1). The response function is normalized with the 60°F
Source:Barreca, Alan, et al (2013) – 69°F category set equal to
zero so each estimate corresponds to the estimated impact of an additional day in bin j on the log monthly
CURBING GLOBAL WARMING: KYOTO TREATY
Kyoto 1997: 35 industrialized nations (but not US) agreed to reduce their
emissions of greenhouse gases to 5% below (depends on country) 1990
levels by the year 2012
Developing countries are not in the treaty even though it is cheaper to use
fuel efficiently as you develop an industrial base than it is to “retrofit” an
existing industrial base
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CURBING GLOBAL WARMING: FUTURE
In the US, Obama directed EPA to regulate CO2 emission [carbon tax or
cap-and-trade requires congress law] but this was undone by Trump
Jonathan Gruber, Public Finance and Public Policy, Fourth Edition, 2012 Worth
Publishers, Chapters 5 and 6
Barreca, Alan, et al. “Adapting to Climate Change: The Remarkable Decline in the
US Temperature-Mortality Relationship over the 20th Century.” Journal of Political
Economy 124(1), 2016, 105-159.(web)
Chay, K. and M. Greenstone “Air Quality, Infant Mortality, and the Clean Air Act of
1970,”NBER Working Paper No. 10053, 2003.(web)
Ellerman, A. Denny, ed. “Markets for clean air: The US acid rain program.”
Cambridge University Press, 2000.(web)
Gruber, Jonathan. “Tobacco at the crossroads: the past and future of smoking
regulation in the United States.” The Journal of Economic Perspectives 15.2 (2001):
193-212.(web)
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Nordhaus, William D., and Joseph Boyer. “Warning the World: Economic Models of
Global Warming.” MIT Press (MA), 2000.(web)
Nordhaus, William D. The Climate Casino: Risk, Uncertainty, and Economics for a
Warming World, Yale University Press, 2013.
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