AGENCY

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AGENCY

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7. Divergence of social & private discount rates. NAT'L RES ECON V ... taxes on tires to pay for recycling them later, carbon taxes to pay for GCC abatement costs) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AGENCY


1
  • AGENCY DISTRIBUTIONAL ISSUES (HIDDEN ECONOMICS)

Prof David K. Linnan USC LAW 666 Unit Five
2
CONCEPTS
  • BASIC CONCEPTS BEHIND ENVIRONMENTAL NATURAL
    RESOURCE ECONOMICS
  • 1. Property rights issues with environment as
    provider of services
  • a. Definition, defense transferability
  • b. Public good problems (non-excludability
  • non-rivalrous consumption)
  • c. Common property problems slightly different
  • 2. Externalities free riders
  • a. Market failure arguments as justification
    for govt/intl regulation taxation as cost
    adjustment
  • b. Agency cost issues once decision makers as
    agents do not bear full costs
  • 3. Cost/benefit analysis at policy level
  • a. Competing uses differing social and
    private marginal costs (taxes to merge, etc.)
  • b. Utilitarian ethics vs public choice
    approaches)
  • 4. Economic instruments idea can guaranty
    anti-pollution efficiency if problems resolved,
    but not distributive justice because most have
    hidden distributional consequences (plus prior
    allocation issues, for instance fishing quotas)

3
ECON INSIGHTS I
  • EFFICIENCY VS DISTRIBUTIVE EFFECTS
  • 1. Technical arguments about environmental or
    natural resource economics as neoclassical
  • a. Efficiency-based exercise as traditional
    microeconomics
  • b. Remember eco-development piece chart
    including economic views (frontier economics
    property rights)?

4
ECON INSIGHTS II
  • EFFICIENCY VS DISTRIBUTIVE EFFECTS (CONTD)
  • 2. Sustainable development entails what
    economic view (ecological economics)?
  • a. Not efficiency based, but rather systems
    approaches measuring non- depletion
    (inter-generational equity)
  • b. Maximizing what, depleteable
    non- depleteable effects?
  • i. Non-declining well-being (capital stock)
  • ii. Non-declining value of natural capital
  • iii. Non-declining physical service flows

5
ECON INSIGHTS III
  • EFFICIENCY VS DISTRIBUTIVE EFFECTS (CONTD)
  • 3. What should be anchor principle as to be
    maximized (back to issue of deep ecology, etc.)
  • 4. Even staying with neo-classical
    microeconomic approaches, does not address
    distributional aspects
  • a. Issues clear on economic instruments
    (taxes vs tradable permits, etc.)
  • b. Both assigning property wealth
    disparities in market mechanism

6
NATL RES ECON I
  • NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS AS NEO-CLASSICAL MICRO
    MODEL
  • 1. Ultimately, conceive of environment as
    provider of goods/services (wetlands to filter
    water, clean air for O2, etc.)
  • 2. Valuation issues on environment as asset,
    assuming ownership as with property rights
  • a. Normal vs contingent (non-market)
    valuation
  • b. Public goods question (who owns
    landscape vs the real property parcels)
  • i. Non-excludability
  • ii. indivisibility

7
NATL RES ECON II
  • NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS AS NEO-CLASSICAL MICRO
    MODEL (CONTD)
  • 3. Supply demand calculation for efficiency
    purposes
  • a. Static (single period)
  • b. Dynamic (multiple period, incorporating
    present value methodology for comparisons)
  • c. Marginal vs average calculations

8
NATL RES ECON III
  • NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS AS NEO-CLASSICAL MICRO
    MODEL (CONTD)
  • 4. Problem of uncaptured effects in property
    right terms (externalities)
  • a. Free services (pouring untreated
    pollutants out of smoke stack)
  • i. Benefit (external economy)
  • ii. Detriment (external diseconomy)
  • b Attendant issues re calculation valuation
    of harm (remediation vs injury vs?)

9
NATL RES ECON IV
  • NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS AS NEO-CLASSICAL MICRO
    MODEL (CONTD)
  • 5. Concept of market failure as traditional
    basis for regulation (cannot rely on property
    rights to ensure efficient allocation decision)
  • 6. Free rider issues (incentive questions)
  • 7. Divergence of social private discount rates

10
NATL RES ECON V
  • NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS AS NEO-CLASSICAL MICRO
    MODEL (CONTD)
  • 8. Cost-benefit analysis for policy planning
    purposes
  • a. Primary vs secondary effects
  • b. Tangible vs intangible benefits
  • c. Treatment of risk
  • i. Probability of particular outcome
  • ii. Uncertainty of effect
  • iii. Anchoring misestimation (psych)
  • iv. Individual differences re openness to
    risk vs risk aversion
  • v. Private vs social discount rates in
    practice

11
NATL RES ECON VI
  • NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS AS NEO-CLASSICAL MICRO
    MODEL (CONTD)
  • 9. Impact analysis (like engineering study),
    typically in face of issues meaning no clarity
    on what to maximize so input/output study
  • 10. Non-use or passive use (e.g., biodiversity),
    can treat as contingent valuation kind of
    problem too, but issue hidden is multiple
    possible uses, and change over time
  • 11. Information assymetry problems

12
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
  • WHAT DOES THE BELOW MAP TELL YOU ABOUT COUNTRIES
    AND ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS/ACTIVITY?
  • http//www.lfip.org/laws666f06/index.htm
  • NOTE THAT THIS IS ALL IN EFFECT MACRO, WHILE MUCH
    OF NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS MICRO
  • BUT WHAT ARE CONNECTIONS INTERNATIONALLY?

13
ECON INSTRUMENTS I
  • CONCEPT OF ECONOMIC INSTRUMENTS ROLE
  • 1. Idea of alternative to inefficient command
    control approach
  • 2. Typical alternatives are taxes or tradable
    permits
  • a. Green taxes may allow assigning costs
    otherwise skipped as externalities (e.g.,
    excise taxes on tires to pay for recycling them
    later, carbon taxes to pay for GCC abatement
    costs)
  • b. Tradeable permits allow producers with
    different remediation costs to remediate vs
    buy right to pollute (to create which someone
    else remediates)

14
ECON INSTRUMENTS II
  • CONCEPT OF ECONOMIC INSTRUMENTS ROLE (CONTD)
  • 3. Distributional aspects are introduced in two
    ways
  • a. Taxation discourages lower income groups
    consumption (income elasticity)
  • i. Preference for income over clean air,
    treat as legitimate?
  • ii. Environmental justice problem writ
    large, exacerbating effects of income
    distribution

15
ECON INSTRUMENTS III
  • CONCEPT OF ECONOMIC INSTRUMENTS ROLE (CONTD)
  • 3. Distributional aspects are introduced in two
    ways (contd)
  • b. Permitting requires a prior assignment of
    property
  • i. Grandfathering vs outright auction,
    with the difference whether benefit to
    government or private party
  • ii. Then creates its own externalities, as
    with those residing near highly polluting
    facility that buys its way out of remediation
    in buying permit to pollute unequal
    remediation locally beyond lowest cost global
    efficiency arguments
  • c. Differing long short term impacts on
    employees, consumers, etc. via adjustment
    cost concept

16
AGENCY
  • AGENCY AS ECONOMIC CONCEPT
  • 1. Problem of incentives, assymetric
    information control by principal (agency
    costs analysis focusing on conflicts of
    interest, costs of monitoring, etc.)
  • 2. Who does the agent represent, and in
    environmental setting how do you apply agency
    concept to competing candidates (government
    NGOs both claiming to represent people or public
    interest)?

17
PROB CONCEPTS
  • HIDDEN ECONOMIC CONCEPTS IN PROBLEMS
  • How to apply the various economic concepts to
    the readings and problems?
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