Title: Chapter 6: Externalities In Action
1Chapter 6 Externalities In Action
- Outline
- Addressing externalities should we focus on
prices or on quantities? - Understand why the answer is that it depends
- Two problems
- Some highlights from Chapter 6
- Acid rain the problems with the 1970 Clean Air
Act - Emissions trading
- Global warming Kyoto and beyond
- Smoking when is it a policy problem and when is
it not?
2A More Realistic Externality Example Acid Rain
- Sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOX)
released into the atmosphere, form sulfuric and
nitric acids. - These acids may fall back to earth hundreds of
miles away from their original source, known as
acid rain. - Majority of acid rain in North America caused by
SO2, much coming from coal-fired power plants
concentrated in the Ohio River Valley. - Acid rain is a negative production externality.
It - Makes lakes more acidic.
- Erodes forests.
- Causes damage to property (5 billion/year).
- Reduces visibility.
- Leads to adverse health outcomes
3History of Acid Rain Regulation
- 1970 Clean Air Act set maximum standards for
various substances, including SO2. - It set New Source Performance Standards (NSPS)
for any new power plant, forcing the plant to
either reduce emissions or install scrubbers. - New plants, therefore, were made more expensive
relative to older plants. Companies thus kept
older, dirtier plants on line longer that they
otherwise would. - Theres an analogy to imposing regulation on new
autos. - Gruber calls this a consequence of partial
policy reform.
4History of Acid Rain Regulation
- 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments mandated a
reduction of more than 50 of the level of SO2
nationwide, and included all plants. - It offered an SO2 allowance system that granted
plants permits to emit SO2 in limited quantities,
based on their historical fuel utilization. - Plants were allowed to buy, sell, or save their
allowances. - The allowances involved very few restrictions
trading could occur anywhere within the United
States, with no approval or review, and the
frequency and mechanism of trading were unlimited.
5History of Acid Rain Regulation
- The 1990 amendments and emissions trading drew
opposition from two very diverse groups - Those opposed on economic grounds, like utilities
and coal miners. - An industry study predicted the full cost of the
regulations to be up to 7.4 billion, with a loss
of up to 4 million jobs. - It was also opposed by environmentalists.
- They opposed the 1990 amendments on the grounds
that they created a market for vice and virtue.
6History of Acid Rain Regulation
- Estimates suggest that emissions trading
significantly lowered the costs of the 1990
amendments. - Over the 1995-2007 period, costs were lowered
from 35 billion to 15 billion. - Thus, trading has worked to greatly improve the
efficiency of regulation. - Even environmentalists are now more sympathetic
to emissions trading, because it reduces economic
opposition. - In less than a decade, emissions trading has
gone from being a pariah among policymakers to
being a star. -- Daniel Ellerman, expert on
acid rain regulations
7Has the Clean Air Act Been a Success?
- The overall success of the Clean Air Act is much
harder to determine. - The regulations were costly. In its first 15
years, the Clean Air Act cost - 600,000 jobs.
- 75 billion in output.
- They did result in benefits, too.
- Health improvements, such as reductions in infant
mortality. - Burtraw, et al. (1997) estimate that the health
benefits alone exceed the cost of reduction by a
factor of seven, once the lower-cost trading
regime was implemented.
8A Second Externality Example Global Warming
- The earth is heated by solar radiation that
passes through our atmosphere and warms the
earths surface. - A large portion of the heat is trapped by certain
gasses in the earths atmosphere, which reflect
the heat back toward the earth again. - This is known as the greenhouse effect.
- The concentration of greenhouse gasses like
carbon dioxide and methane has increased due to
human activity. - Using fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural
gas produce carbon dioxide and contribute to this
effect.
9GLOBAL WARMING
- The surface temperatures have increased by more
than 1 degree Fahrenheit in the past 30 years. - Projections for the next 100 years suggest an
unprecedented increase by as much as 6-10
degrees. - Carbon emissions in Boston and Bangkok have the
same effect on the global environment. - The stock, not the flow, of carbon dioxide cause
the warming. Thus, it takes a long time to undo
the damage. - Global warming is a thus a complicated
externality involving many nations and many
generations of emitters.
10The U.S. is currently responsible for nearly 25
of the planets carbon dioxide emissions.
Developing counties like China and India emit
large quantities of greenhouse gasses.
Japan contributes only 5 of annual emissions.
11The Kyoto Treaty
- The goal of the Kyoto treaty in 1997 was to
reduce the emissions of greenhouse gasses to 5
below their 1990 levels. - United States and Russia have not signed on many
other of the 38 industrialized nations have,
however. - For the United States, the Kyoto treaty would
- Mean reducing emissions in 2010 by roughly 30
- With a present discounted cost of
1,100,000,000,000 (1.1 trillion) - The United States would bear 90 of the total
world cost, even though it contributes only 25
of annual greenhouse gas emissions.
12Can Trading Make Kyoto More Cost-Effective?
- Kyoto treaty introduced international emissions
trading. - Under the Kyoto treaty, the industrialized
signatories are allowed to trade emissions rights
among themselves, as long as the total emissions
goals are met. - There are tremendous differences across developed
nations in terms of meeting these goals, for two
reasons - Slow growth in some countries Relatively easy
for a country like Russia to meet its goal.
Estimates suggest that emissions trading (say,
from Russia to United States) could lower the
cost of the treaty by 75. - Environmentally conscious growth Other
countries, like Japan, tend to use more gas and
nuclear-powered production. - Figure 3 shows the benefits of international
emissions trading (the readings for today give an
update from the Montreal, the site of the most
recent international climate change meetings).
13Yet the treaty calls for the U.S. to reduce
emissions a lot.
It is fairly expensive for the U.S. to reduce its
emissions.
It is easier for Russia and others to reduce
their emissions.
And the requirements are lower, too.
Price of carbon reduction
SUS
The total cost to the U.S. is 440x210.
SR
ST
210
The overall cost, with emissions trading, is 32
billion.
With emissions trading, the supply curve is
summed horizontally.
The cost of worldwide emission reduction is 50
per ton with ST.
The total cost to Russia and others is 190x20.
50
The U.S. buys 400 permits (440-40).
The overall cost, with no emissions trading, is
96 billion.
20
Carbon Reduction (millions of metric tons)
0
630
440
190
590
40
14A Third Externality Example The Economics of
Smoking
- Smoking causes more than 440,000 deaths each
year, four times as much as AIDS, motor vehicle
accidents, homicide, and suicide combined. - What is the role for government intervention in
the case of a decision like smoking? Several
possible arguments - Smoking is bad for you.
- Smoking is addictive.
- It generates negative externalities to the health
system, workplace, and fire departments. - It generates positive externalities to the Social
Security and Medicare system. - It creates negative externalities to other family
members through secondhand smoke.
15THE ECONOMICS OF SMOKING
- Smoking is bad for you.
- Smoker lives about 6 fewer years than a
nonsmoker. - A year of life is valued by economists at about
200,000. - In standard utility-maximization, any damage
individuals do to themselves from dangerous
activities results from a rational tradeoff of
benefits against potential costs. - Perhaps a rationalization can be given because
young people make decisions to smoke when they
are not capable of sensibly assessing the
benefits and costs of their decisions - Or cigarettes are so additive that people dont
understand they cant quit (or have a very hard
time quitting).
16THE ECONOMICS OF SMOKING
- Smoking is addictive.
- Rational addicts understand that each cigarette
that they smoke today increases their addiction. - Smokers consider not only the cost of todays
pack of cigarettes, but the cost of all
additional future packs that will now be
purchased because their addiction is deepened. - Smokers also understand that smoking doesnt just
reduce health through the current cigarette, but
all future cigarettes that will be consumed
because of the addiction. - With this model, smoking remains a rational
choice.
17The Externalities of Smoking
- Smoking generates negative externalities due to
higher health costs. - Smoking-related disease increases U.S. medical
care costs by 75 billion annually, 5 of the
total. - If insurance companies can make actuarial
adjustments, they simply charge smokers higher
rates. - Such adjustments internalize the medical cost
externality from smoking. In a simple model,
there are no health externalities because smokers
pay for the high medical costs through higher
premiums.
18The Externalities of Smoking
- In fact, actuarial adjustments are often not made
with employer health insurance. - In this case, the externality is financial, not
physical. This is an externality because the
social marginal benefit from an individuals
cigarette consumption is below the private
marginal benefitthe individuals coworkers have
to pay higher premiums. - In addition to higher health costs to the private
sector, individuals who receive government
insurance exert a negative externality onto
taxpayers. - The same is true of the uninsured (smokers and
non-smokers alike)they exert negative
externalities onto medical providers, who pass
along the costs to consumers.
19The Economics of Smoking
- Smoking generates negative externalities due to
lower workplace productivity and more frequent
absences. - Firms may be able to adjust wages to compensate
for this type of problem. - If workers wages adjust to compensate for their
lower expected productivity, then the externality
is internalized, akin to the adjustments in
health premiums.
20The Economics of Smoking
- Smoking generates negative externalities due to
fires, mostly due to falling asleep with a
burning cigarette. - To the extent the smoker only damages himself and
his own property, there is not an externality.
But if the fire spreads to other properties,
there is an externality. - Also costs to fire departments and insurance
companies that may not be fully internalized.
21The Externalities of Smoking
- Smoking generates positive externalities to
taxpayers due to the early deaths of smokers and
lower payouts for some social insurance programs. - Often contribute payroll tax for Social Security
and Medicare during working life, but smokers may
not be alive to collect benefits when they are
elderly.
22The Economics of Smoking
- Smoking generates negative externalities (mostly
to other family members) through secondhand
smoke. - Considerable medical uncertainty about the
damages done from this. - Moreover, if the smoker maximizes family utility
rather than individual utility, he/she rationally
trades off the benefits to himself/herself versus
the harm to his/her family. - Evidence suggest family utility maximization is
incomplete, however.
23The Economics of Smoking
- Taken together, the external costs of smoking are
roughly 40 per pack of cigarettes in 2003
dollars. - Estimates of external costs of secondhand smoke
vary widely, from 1 to 1.16 per pack. - The average federal plus state cigarette tax is
over 1 per pack.
24Should We Care Only About Externalities, or Do
Internalities Matter Also?
- Traditional economics approach cares only about
externalities that smokers impose on others. - Model ignores some key features of the smoking
decision that may motivate government
intervention. - Youth smoking decisions
- Inability of adults to quit
- Maybe policymakers should decide that people are
unable to do what is best for them, and
consequently policy should try to influence
choices. This, of course, is a slippery slope. - Information/outreach campaignsthese have reduced
the smoking rate a lot over the last 30 years. - Reducing access to cigarettes for teenagers.
- Taxationelasticity of demand for cigarettes is
around -0.5, and higher for youth smokers.