Should we tax or let firms trade emissions? An experimental analysis with policy implications for developing countries
Abstract
In this paper we use laboratory experiments to test the theoretical predictions derived by Villegas-Palacio and Coria (2010) about the effects of the interaction between technology adoption and incomplete enforcement. They show that under Tradable Emissions Permits (TEPs), and in contrast to taxes, the fall in permit price produced by adoption of environmentally friendly technologies reduces the benefits of violating the environmental regulation at the margin and leads firms to improve their compliance behavior. Moreover, when TEPs are used, the regulator can speed up the diffusion of new technologies since the benefits from adopting the new technology increase with the enforcement stringency.
Our experimental results confirm these theoretical predictions. While the aggregate emissions do not statistically differ between the two policy instruments, the fraction of firms violating the regulation and the aggregate extent of violation are lower under TEPs than under emission taxes regardless of the monitoring probability. Hence, in contrast to previous studies, our results indicate that TEPs would appear to be a feasible policy alternative in weak regulatory contexts.
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Date
2011-09Author
Coria, Jessica
Villegas-Palacio, Clara
Cárdenas, J.C.
Keywords
laboratory experiments
emission taxes
auctioned tradable emissions permits
imperfect monitoring
technology adoption
developing countries
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
516
Language
eng