Title: Policy Remedies
1Policy Remedies
Session 5
MT292 Introduction to Technology
Policy Vanderbilt University School of
Engineering
2Remedies to Market Imperfections
- Market-based Solutions
- Government Intervention
3Market-Based Solutions
- Voluntary Industry Cooperation
- Nongovernmental Standards Bodies
- e.g., IEEE, UL, ACM, URAC
- - Key risk industry captures regulatory body
- e.g., accounting profession and FASB
- Technology Clusters
- E.g., Research Parks
- Privatization of Public Services
- Outsourcing, Performance Contracting, Vouchers
- "Securitization" of Risk, Externalities
- Derivatives
- Asset-based Securities (e.g., secondary mortgage
market) - Pollution Rights
- Fishing Rights
Acronyms spelled out in slide notes below.
4Government Intervention (in ascending order of
intervention level)
- Reduce market inefficiencies
- Incentives/Disincentives
- Direct and indirect subsidies
- Regulation
- Direct Investment
5Reduce Market Inefficiencies
- Reduce entry barriers
- e.g., FDA accelerated approval processes
- Standardization
- Disclosure requirements
- e.g., Sources of financial support for
researchers - e.g., Labeling regulations
- Reduce mobility barriers
- e.g., Euro, NAFTA, WTO
- Reduce transaction costs
- Internet
- Trade barriers
6Incentives/Disincentives
- Incentives
- e.g., RD tax credit
- e.g., Internet Tax Moratorium
- Disincentives
- Taxes
- Penalties for Polluters
- User fees
7Direct and Indirect Subsidies
- Direct Subsidies
- Cooperative Research
- See National Research Council
- e.g., Government-sponsored AIDS research
- e.g., NIHs genome project
- Support of Infrastructure
- Federal programs to support public education
- Sponsored basic research
- Communications
- Universal Internet Access for Schools
- Transportation
- FAA
8Direct Regulation
- Control Supply/Demand
- Price Controls
- Drugs/Medical Care
- Rationing of Supply
- Energy, Scarce Resources
- Emission Controls ( CAFE standards)
- Immigration Policy
- Spectrum allocation
- Body organs/health care
9Direct Regulation
- Control Product/Process Characteristics
- FDA, Consumer Product Safety Com., EPA, etc.
- Control Profits
- Rate-of-Return Regulation
- Utilities, Insurers
- Control Entry
- Licenses, patents, permits, charters, franchises,
concessions
10Direct Regulation
- Control Collusion/Increase Competition
- Antitrust
- Conduct remedies
- Structural remedies
- For vertical concentration (Microsoft)
- For horizontal concentration (Ma Bell -gtRBOCs,
media) - Control Ownership
- Caps on controlling interest
- e.g., foreign control of telecommunications,
defense firms
11Direct Investment(public sector ownership)
- Technology Transfer/Civilian Spinoffs
- Nuclear Power
- Navy -gtAEC -gt utilities
- Commercial Aerospace
- NASA -gt private launch, transport companies
- Internet
- DARPA -gt Network Solutions -gt private sector
- State-owned enterprises
- common outside U.S.
- e.g., energy, telecommunications, transportation
sectors
Acronyms spelled out in slide notes below.
12How do you determine the best policy intervention?
- evaluation criteria (the four es)
- Effectiveness
- Equity
- Enforceability
- Economic efficiency
13Effectiveness
- Does the remedy address the policy problem?
- Does it lead to a satisfactory solution?
- Can you determine (measure) the policys impact?
- Example Microsoft antitrust settlement
14Equity
- Does the policy remedy address the needs and
concerns of all the affected parties? - Do all parties have a role in the formulation of
the policy? - Are the interests of the less powerful
constituents adequately addressed? - One of the reasons for public intervention in the
first place! - Example Use of genetic screening for employment,
insurability decisions
15Enforceability
- Can the policy be implemented at reasonable cost
and effort by all parties concerned?
(feasibility) - Can implementation be monitored?
- Can compliance by all parties be enforced?
- Example pollution from agricultural run-off
16Economic Efficiency
- To what extent does the policy option introduce
unintended distortions (side effects) into the
economic environment? - Rule of thumb the greater the level of
intervention, the more unintended side effects it
will introduce. - Are these effects acceptable?
- Does the policy provide for minimizing them?
- Example CA electricity price controls
17Common Economic Distortions of Policy
Interventions
- Moral Hazard - The policy inadvertently
encourages counterproductive behavior - Ex. 1 highly subsidized health insurance reduces
the personal cost of unhealthy behavior - Ex. 2 subsidized interest loans, loan guarantees
encourage reckless risk-taking (FDIC) - Adverse Selection The benefits go
disproportionately to those who least need them - Ex. MSAs draw the healthiest subscribers from
the insurance pool, leaving the least healthy and
raising premiums. - Agency Problems Payer and consumer are different
parties - Ex. Workers Compensation discourages job-seeking.
18Measuring Economic Distortion of a Tax or Subsidy
The Harberger Triangle
Shaded area is cost to the economy (welfare loss)
19Guidance for Policy Developers
- Always begin the policy debate by asking, What
if we do nothing? - Democracies and free-market economies, like the
body, have many self-correcting mechanisms. - The more intrusive the policy into the economy,
the higher the burden of proof on the policy
maker - Select the policy intervention that accomplishes
its purpose with the lowest level of economic
distortion