Resource and Environmental Economics
Fall 2019, ETH D-MTEC, Prof. Lucas Bretschger
Fall 2019, ETH D-MTEC, Prof. Lucas Bretschger
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 51 |
---|---|
Language | English |
Category | Micro-Economics |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 10.01.2020 / 09.02.2020 |
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Two ethical systems
- Humanist moral philosophy: rights and duties are accorded exclusively to human beings
human beings are the source of values - Naturalist moral philosophy: extends these moral rights to other creatures (animals, plants)
values are defined in relation to a natural system, but in the end decisions are taken by humans
Liberalism
- Focus on individual rights and freedom
- Private property is legitimate if acquired under generally accepted rules
- Role of economic policy: guarantee property rights and market access, provide public goods, correct market failure
Utilitarianism
- Focus on individual utility, welfare and happiness
narrow form - utility is individual
extended form - utility includes utility of other individuals and value of nature - Social welfare is a function of individual utilities
- Government should maximize social welfare
- No concept of justice
Social and intertemporal welfare
- Social welfare: aggregation of individual utilities
- Intertemporal welfare: welfare over the future, discounted with the utiliy's discount rate
\(\displaystyle{W}=\displaystyle\sum_{t=0}^\infty \frac{U_t}{(1+\rho)^t}\) or \(W=\displaystyle\int_0^\infty U_te^{-\rho t}dt\)
\(U_t\): utility at time t
\(\rho\): discount rate of utility
Markets lead to high allocative efficiency, but failures occur as markets do not consider...
- individual benefits from natural resources
- central ecological functions of natural resources
- costs of utilization and exhaustion of natural resources
Rawls fairness
Fair distribution is reached by a concensus of free and rational individuals who decide under a veil of ignorance referring to generation, position, attitude etc. A unequal distribution will only occur if:
- it improves everyone's position - e.g. people creating positive externalities will receive more
- it is connected to specific positions - people with high responsibility
Economic and non-economic market failures
- Economic: externalitites, public goods, monopolies
- Non-economic: illegal trade with restricted goods, undermining of governmental or state controls, ethical concerns
Internalization of externalities (definition & examples)
Change incentives such that individuals take account for externalities
- taxation of negative externalities
- subsidization of positive externalities
- Industrial policy (e.g. protection of patents)
Pigouvian tax
Tax that targets the internalization of negative externalities by taxing them.
Supply curve shifts upwards, price for consumers increase, quantity supplied & demanded decreases, deadweight loss occurs
Gross benefit (avoided area) = grey+orange area ABCD
Cost = grey area ABD
Net benefit = gross benefit - cost = orange area BCD
Tax income (transfer, not cost) = yellow area
Coase theorem (definition & assumption)
Possibility for externalities to be internalized without government intervention --> bargaining between generator of externalities and parties affected at no charge --> efficient
Assumptions:
- no transaction costs
- perfect information (about all utility functions)
- perfect communication
Coase theorem (example): carpenter makes noise making it impossible for the doctor to work.
Profits if working:
- Doctor: 60
- Carpenter: 40
- State net benefits for both and total net benefits if carpenter is liable for noise and not
- State net benefits for both and total net benefts if carpenter is liable for noise and not and a noise prevention is installed for cost of P
Different types of pollution
- Flow-damage pollution: damage results only from the flow of residuals and immediately drops to zero if emission flows stop (e.g. noise, light)
- Stock-damage pollution: damages only depend on the stock of the pollutant (e.g. heavy metals)
- Stock-flow pollution: mixe of both types (e.g. CO2, waste emissions)
Other ways to correct for environmental externalities
- Campaign: influence behavior of individuals without creating mandatory rules
- Direct production of environmental quality. nature reserves, waste water treatment, aeration of lakes
- Prevention of pollution: support new technologies, cooperation of universities and private sector
- Command and control insturments: standards on input, technology, pollution etc., making excessive pollution illegal
- Economic incentives: set incentives to enhance individual optimization (tax, subsidies, tradable permits)
Advantages and disadvantages of command & control instruments
Advantages:
- cheaper if monitoring costs are high
- easier if optimal abatement level is zero or close to zero (very toxic substances)
Disadvantages:
- uncertainty about level of intended standards (e.g. efficiency: marginal costs = marginal damage)
- same standards applied everywhere or vary regionally
- regulations create little incentives for innovation ones standard is reached
- if abatement costs vary, command & control instruments do not minimize total social abatement costs
Pigouvian tax vs. pollution certificates
- Pigouvian tax sets pollution price, pollution quantity results from demand curve
--> pollution targets might be missed, if demand curve is estimated falsly - Pollution certificates set maximum pollution quantity, price for certificates results from demand curve
--> pollution targets are met for sure
Types of environmental emission standards
- Ambient pllution standards: regulate the quantity of matter in the ambient environment
e.g. parts per million, ozone concentration - Emission standards: regulate level of permitted emissions
e.g. rate of emission, total amount of emitted pollutant - Technology standards: require a certain technology, practice or production process
e.g. catalytic converters in cars, lead-free gasoline, energy labelling (A,B,C,D,E,F)
Reaching environmental goals can be achieved for free or even at negative cost. How?
- Elimination of technical and economic inefficiency (e.g. energy usage)
- Trigger for technological change
- Positive side-effects (e.g. reduction of GHG reduces environmental warming and as side-effect improving health
- Double dividend: tax revenue of emission tax can be used to reduce marginal tax rate of other taxes --> substitution of taxes; if other tax have a distortion effect, the reduction of this tax will increase efficiency
this turned out to not work properly
Hartwick rule
Cobb-douglas output function:
\(Y=K^{\alpha}R^{1-\alpha}\)
\(K\): physical capital
\(R\): non-renewable resource use
Hotelling rule
Extracting and selling a resource and investing the resulting profit in bonds with interest rate r
\(\pi ^R\): rent, per unit resource profit --> \(\pi ^R=\text{price}-\text{per unit extraction cost}\)
Three possibilities:
- \({\pi _1^R \over \pi_0^R}>1+r\) --> keep resource stock fully in the ground
- \({\pi _1^R \over \pi_0^R}<1+r\) --> sell the whole resource stock
- \({\pi _1^R \over \pi_0^R}=1+r\) --> equilibrium (no arbitrage possible)
\({p_{t+1}^R - c_{t+1}^R \over p_t^R - c_t^R} = 1+r \to r = {{d(p^R - c^R) \over dt} \over p^R - c^R} = {{d\pi ^R \over dt} \over \pi^R}\) --> in order to have profit when leaving the resource in the stock, the rent must increase
Limits to the Hotelling rule
- no perfect foresight
- exact time, kind and price of backstop technology unknown
- in reality, extraction costs are variable
- variable in Hotelling rule is the net price of a resource, but net price cannot be measured (only market price)
- data shows that prices of iron, cupper or silver in fact have fallen over time (should raise according to Hotelling) due to decreasing extraction costs
Logistic regeneration function (formula & graph)
\(F(V)={dV \over dt}=gV(1-{V \over V_{max}})\)
\(V\): stock of fish
\(CCH\): carrying capacity of the habitat
\(MSY\): maximal sustainable yield
Biological equilibrium: \(F(V)=0 \to V=0\ \text{or}\ V=\text{CCH}\)
Harvesting in logistic regeneration function
Cost of harvesting
\(C=\omega \cdot E = \omega {Z \over eV}\)
\(\omega\): cost per unit of effort
Tragedy of the commons
people try to maximize their own utility instead of the social utility –> they ignore the externality they impose on others –> common resources are overexploited
Solution: taxation or assigning of private properties
Development of the fish stock with harvesting, biologic and economic equilibrium
\(F(V)=g(1-{V \over V_{max}})V-eEV\)
Biological equilibium: natural regeneration = harvesting
\(F(V)=0 \to g(1-{V \over V{max}})=eE\)
Economic equilibrium: zero profit
\(\text{profit} = \text{revenue}-\text{cost} = \pi = PZ-C=PeEV - \omega E = 0 \to V^* = {\omega \over eP}\)
Compensation principle
If prospective gainers could compensate (any) prospective losers and leave no one worse off, a project/policy should be implemented --> NPV > 0
Problems of a cost-benefit analysis
- how to measure costs & benefits
- how to choose discount rate r and observation period T
- how to deal with uncertainties
- consideration of distribution and fairness
- ethical consideration
Different approaches for indirect expression/measurement of benefits for NPV and their problems
- Avoidance cost approach: measure money spent in order to avoid negative environmental issues
e.g. installation of air filters, construction of dams
Problem: those goods also generate other benefits --> difficult to distinguish - Travel cost approach: measure amount demanded at a certain price and fit demand curve
e.g. to measure benefit of a clean beach, measure costs tourists are willing to pay
Problem: accounting for substitutes (e.g. park near the beach), sample selection problem (over-representation of regular users) - Hedonic prices: measure the correlation between environmental quality and house prices
e.g. impact of aircraft noise on house prices near an airport
Problem: models are extremely complex, missing important attributes can lead to considerable biases - Contingent valuation method: measure willingness to pay for certain environmental goods
e.g. by survey
Problem: contradictory responses, influence of current events
Costs in NPV
- Fixed costs: construction costs, costs for change of processes etc.
- Variable costs: maintenance costs, operating costs etc.
Types of risks in cost-benefit analysis
- Stochastic risks: dependent on chance
- Systematic risks: dependent on circumstances (e.g. risk of getting cancer by smoking)
Limits of cost-benefit analysis for environmental issues
- Weakness of basic methods (travel cost, hedonic cost etc.)
- Consumer preferences are probably not the right benchmark for social decisions
- Maybe not only humans but also animals and plants should be considered
Concepts of sustainability
Stock based definitions:
- Weak sustainability: maintenance of aggregate productive capacity, substitution between natural & accumulated capital
- Strong sustainability: preserving the stock as it is, no substitution between natural & accumulated capital, but between natural resource types
Ecological thresholds:
- Keep safe minimal standards for all species --> natural capital stock is not allowed to fall below a certain secure threshold
- Meet conditions for ecosystem resilience
Flow based definitions:
- Obtaining constant yield of natural resources
- Nondeclining utility over time
Genuine savings
Form of weak sustainability. Expands traditional saving definition by investment in other types of productive capital (human capital, R&D, social capital) and extraction of natural resources and pollution damages
Genuine savings = gross savings
+ educational savings
- depreciation of fixed capital
- depletion of natural resources
- pollution damages
Problem: no focus on future, monetary estimation of natural goods without market price
Sustainability indicators
- Genuine savings
- Environmental Performance Index (EPI)
- Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW)
- Ecological Footprint
Problems of those indicators:
- how to weight differnet aspects
- how to convert different indicators into a single unit of measurement