Title: Diapositiva 1
1International Policy Making
Lecture 18 Policy Instruments Magnus
Hennlock Department of Economics and
Statistics Gothenburg University
2International Policy Making
- Literature
- Sterner Ch 17 (p 203-211), Baumol Oates Ch 15
- Barrett, S. (1994), Strategic Environmental
Policy and International Trade, Journal of
Public Economics 54 325-38. - Chichilnisky, G, North South Trade and the
Global Environment, AER, Sept 1994. - Oates, W.E. and R.M. Schwab (1988), Economic
Competition Among Jurisdictions Efficiency
Enhancing or Distortion Inducing? Journal of
Public Economics 35(3) 333-54
3Added Features of International Policy Making
- International problems
- Several sovereign policymakers
- International externalities / transboundary
pollution - Heterogeneous emission generation (e.g. fossil
intensity) - Heterogeneous damage costs between countries
- Often long term problem
- E.g. overfishing in international water, climate
change - Annual flows (e.g. harvest or CO2 emissions) can
be influenced by policy rather than the stock
(fish or CO2 stock) - Benefits and costs are intergenerational
4Theoretical frameworks?
- No supranational policymaker exists but many
sovereign policymakers in the presence of
international externalities - game theory rather than one social welfare max
needed to find possible policy instruments and
standards - If long term effects
- dynamic optimization
- Uncertainty in global issues
- risk analysis, stochastic optimization
5Which Policy Instruments?
- In principle the same instruments that can be
used by a single policymaker (taxes, permits,
subsidies, direct regulation etc) - A global uniform policy instrument would need a
supranational policymaker - Harmonized national policy instruments require
international cooperation between national
policymakers
6Some Evaluation Criteria when Selecting Policy
Instruments
- Distribution effects between firms, government,
consumers and countries - Efficiency (total cost for industry as whole per
reduction in emissions) - Administration costs
- Output effects (additional reduction in emissions
due to higher product price) - Revenue recycling effect and green tax reforms
- Incentives for Innovation and R D
- Distortionary effects and trade flows
7Possible International Policy Instruments and
Harmonization
- Harmonized direct regulation
- A Uniform International tax
- Harmonized domestic taxes
- International Tradable Permits
8Harmonized Direct Regulation
- Setting standards and maximum levels of emissions
becomes difficult since costs differ widely
across industries in different countries. - Total cost of reducing total emissions would be
larger as marginal costs would differ across
countries with different cost structures.
9A Uniform International Tax
- The tax revenue is collected centrally and
redistributed to countries according to a
cost-sharing rule. Also cost effective. - Would need a Global Union where single countries
hand over decision power to the Global Union
(compare to EU legislation) which impose and
enforce the tax in all countries.
10Harmonized Domestic Taxes
- Agreement across countries to adopt the same
national tax rates. This would be cost effective,
i.e. marginal abatement costs would be equal
across countries and the total cost of total
reduction in emissions would be minimized. - If one country sets lower tax for its own
industry it benefits domestic industry at the
cost of other countries. Free-riding problem!
Lobbying industry in some countries!
11International Tradable Permits
- Agreement about how much to reduce total
emissions - Countries need to agree how to allocate permits
between countries - Countries/firms may buy or sell permits on an
international market for permits. (e.g. ETS) - If grandfathered less resistance from industry
in countries where lobbying power is strong
12Will EU-15 reach the Kyoto Protocol Target with
international tradable permits?
Oops?
Source Greenhouse gas emission trends and
projections in Europe 2007 Tracking progress
towards Kyoto targets EEA Report No 5/2007 ISSN
1725-9177
13A closer look again
Source Greenhouse gas emission trends and
projections in Europe 2007 Tracking progress
towards Kyoto targets EEA Report No 5/2007 ISSN
1725-9177
14Estimates for 2010 EU-15 must buy permits to
reach Kyoto target!! Who will sell permits?
15Problems of Many Sovereign Policymakers
- Each government needs to find a national
environmental policy harmonization problems - No supranational policymaker exists that can
legally enforce national policies that are
globally optimal ? commitment problems - Harmonization of national policy instruments
requires voluntary international cooperation
between policymakers ? free-rider problems
16International Environmental Agreements (IEA)
- UN denotation
- Convention Agreement about objectives
- Protocol Agreement about implementing policies
(calls for policy action) - Some conventions
- UNs Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) 1992 - International Convention for the Regulation of
Whaling - Some protocols
- Helsinki Protocol - 21 ECE parties on sulphur
emissions - Montreal Protocol - 191 parties on CFC gases
- Kyoto Protocol - 174 parties on GHG gases
17Five Stages in International NegotiationBarrett
(1998)
- Absence of a Supranational Policymaker ?
International negotiations as a process towards a
cooperative outcome - 1. Pre-negotiation
- An informal process where the countries make
claims (sometimes cheap talks and non-credible
threats) trying to improve their bargaining
position. - 2. Negotiation
- Representatives of the countries come together
in the first formal meetings. Start with choosing
a written text, a negotiating draft, which is
discussed in different groups by representatives
from the countries. A protocol according to UN is
a joint instrument containing obligations (what
to do) for the countries to implement the
objectives of a convention
18- 3. Ratification
- The representative will take the signed protocol
and hand it over to her parliament which may or
may not ratify the protocol by a decision-making
process that satisfy domestic legislation. - 4. Implementation
- 5. Re-negotiation
- Treaties may be adjusted afterwards by consensus
as a result of unforeseen events. If a treaty is
amended it must usually be ratified again.
19Game theory in policy analysis
Similar structural problem as a Prisoners
dilemma and the beach problem!
Country 2
Ratify
Not ratify
-20, -20
40,-30
Not ratify
Country 1
Ratify
-30, 40
20, 20
20Common Methodological Approach in International
Policy Making
- Determine the Nash equilibrium policies as a
benchmark - Determine the Cooperative Solution as objective
or benchmark - Coalition Theory
211. Nash equilibrium policies
- Determine the Nash equilibrium policies
- Every policymaker chooses her own optimal
emissions levels given the expectation that any
other policymaker also will do this - No communication but individual setting of
emission levels among policymakers
222. Cooperative Solution
- Determine the Cooperative Solution
- A set of Pareto optimal levels for national
policies - A burden sharing rule that fulfils some
individual rationality condition e.g. - Nash bargaining solution
- Kalai-Smorodinsky solution
- Egalitarian solution
Side payments may be needed to satisfy individual
rationality!
23Nash Bargaining Solution
24Example Carbon Taxes in the RICE model
25Net Benefits of Noncooperation vs Cooperation in
the 1999 RICE model
26Net Benefits from Noncooperation and Cooperation
in 1999 RICE model
27(No Transcript)
28Major Interests in Climate Negotiations
- EU and many developed countries want a global
system for emissions reductions and binding
commitments - USA does not want binding agreements but rather
cooperation based on voluntarily agreements
also energy efficiency before reductions - Fast growing economies seem to accept CO2
reductions but want guarantees for further
economic development - Developing countries prefer no reduction in their
emissions but want guarantees for economic
development from poverty and adaptation - India and China claim they are going to increase
CO2 emissions - OPEC wants compensation for reduction in
incomes or support for economic diversifying
293. Coalition Theory (brief introduction)
- Instead of exogenously assuming that no one
cooperates (as in Nash eq.) or that all
cooperates (as in the cooperative sol.) - make
the number of countries cooperating endogenous
and solve for how many (of all) will join a
coalition. - The size of a coalition can be anything between 1
country (trivial case) and all N countries (full
cooperative solution). - Are there ways we can design protocols or the
process of treaty-making such that a coalition
grows bigger, approaching the cooperative
equilibrium?
30Simplest example with 3 countries
31Simplest example with 3 countries
With more than three countries, the number of
combinations to calculate increases at a
horrifying rate! Usually only numerical
simulation possible.
32Framework of Coalition Theory
- A coalition S consists of 1, , N countries
- Countries within the coalition cooperate with
each other and jointly play Nash strategy
policies against the countries which have chosen
to stay outside - Each country that stay outside the coalition
plays a Nash strategy policy against the
coalition and all other countries that are
outside - A country that joins a coalition is rewarded
since the other countries increase their
abatement levels - A country that leaves a coalition is punished as
the remaining participants in the coalition will
act together as one big agent playing Nash
strategies against her
33Equilibrium with a Stable Coalition
- Definition A stable coalition S occurs when
- no country has an incentive to leave the
coalition (internal stability) and - no country has an incentive to join the coalition
(external stability)
34How do we grow a stable coalition?
Look for ways to design protocols or the process
of treaty-making such that a stable coalition
grows bigger, towards the cooperative equilibrium?
35What determines the size of a stable coalition?
- Conclusive is the ratio of the MC slope and MB
slope of the countries that join the coalition
(Barret, 1994b)
36Self-enforcing International Agreements
(Barrett, 1994b)
The steeper the MC curve is relative to the slope
of the MB curve, the more difficult becomes
cooperation between the countries Barrett
(1994b) The stable coalition size may decrease at
most down to 2 countries and the remaining 98
countries free-ride in the N 100 case
Implications for mechanisms when designing
protocols and IEAs!
The flatter the MC curve is relative to the slope
of the MB curve, the easier becomes cooperation
between the countries Barrett (1994b) The stable
coalition size may increase up to 100 of 100
countries and no free-riders in the N 100
case
37Mitigating Growth of Stable Coalitions
- The process by which negotiation takes places
matters (could countries with low ratio of MC/MB
slope start negotiations?) - Minimum Participation Clauses (MPC)
- Design of payment flows in agreements that may
change the relative ratio of the slopes of MC/MB
38Minimum Participation Clauses (MPC)
- Example Kyoto protocol required at least 55
Parties to the Convention, incorporating Parties
included in the Annex I which accounted in total
for at least 55 per cent of the total carbon
dioxide emissions for 1990 of the parties
included in Annex I - The MPC makes each participating countrys
obligations a non-linear function of the total
number of signatories. - The MPC gives incentives to countries at the
margin, to join the agreement. (Russia 2004) as
they will bind all countries that have ratified
the agreement. - Courtois Haerringer (2005) calculate optimal
MPC levels
39Literature
- Barrett, S. (1994), Strategic Environmental
Policy and International Trade, Journal of
Public Economics 54 325-38. - Chichilnisky, G, North South Trade and the
Global Environment, AER, Sept 1994. - Oates, W.E. and R.M. Schwab (1988), Economic
Competition Among Jurisdictions Efficiency
Enhancing or Distortion Inducing? Journal of
Public Economics 35(3) 333-54
40- Barrett (1994)
- Case with two countries, two policymakers and one
industry in each country
41- Chichilnisky (1994)
- South ill-defined property rights ? South
overproduces resource-intensive goods even if its
not well endowed with them and North
overconsumes it. Taxes may worsen the situation.
42- Oates, W.E. and R.M. Schwab (1988),
- Combining environmental standard and a tax on
capital to induce capital inflow to the region
43Summary - International Policy Making
- Many policymakers with different benefits and
costs - No supranational policymaker that can enforce
globally optimal policies - Non-cooperative Nash and cooperative solutions
become extreme benchmarks in game-theoretic
analyses - Coalition theory may analyse the cases of partial
cooperation between Nash and full cooperation as
special extreme cases - The objective of policy instruments becomes one
of mitigating growth of stable coalitions towards
cooperative solution rather than just
internalizing externalities - Examples of conclusive matters Ratio of the
slopes of MC/MB, design of payment flows in
agreements, the process by which negotiation
takes place matters, Minimum Participation
Clauses (MPC)
44Thanks