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12: Cost-Effective Climate Policies

  • Page ID
    41708

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    MARK R. JACOBSEN UC San Diego

    Learning Objectives
    • Identify policies that are market based versus command based in practice. What aspects of a particular environmental policy determine the kinds of change it will create?
    • Explain why command-based policies are not cost-effective. For any given command-based policy, be able to come up with examples of incentives that are missing or misplaced. Explain how a market-based policy could cost the same amount but accomplish a greater environmental goal.
    • Consider the role of consumer choice and behavior in the context of the two types of policy. Understand why command-based policies can sometimes be justified if consumers would otherwise make mistakes while shopping.

    Overview

    In practice, the control of greenhouse gas emissions takes one of two forms: market-based incentives (giving polluters a financial reason to cut back) and command-based regulation (requiring that emissions fall below a certain level, often through the use of specific technologies). Chapter 11 lays out the basic economic argument: command-based approaches often pick inefficient levels of emissions for a particular source, technologies that are not cost-effective, or both. Incentive-based approaches (most importantly, a carbon tax) place many sources of emissions and many different technologies on the same playing field, such that only the most cost-effective reductions in the most cost-effective sectors are employed. The overall strength of the incentive to reduce carbon emissions can be adjusted up and down by varying the level of the tax.

    This chapter outlines the incentives created by different types of policies and uses examples of real policies around the world to show how close or how far we are from the economic goal of cost-effectiveness.


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