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Environmental Property Rights

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ENVIRONMENTAL. PROPERTY RIGHTS. Andrew Davis, Sarah Germann, Matthew Johnston, Jelling Lai, Matt Trout. Outline. Coase ... Specify how persons may be benefited ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Property Rights


1
Environmental Property Rights
  • Andrew Davis, Sarah Germann, Matthew Johnston,
    Jelling Lai, Matt Trout

2
Outline
  • Coase
  • Limitations
  • Examples
  • Legal Issues
  • Beyond Coase
  • The Future

3
Coase
4
Use of Property Rights
  • Property rights rights to use resources
  • Convey the right to benefit or harm oneself or
    others
  • Specify how persons may be benefited and harmed
  • Function as guiding incentives to achieve a
    greater internalization of beneficial and harmful
    effects
  • Communal vs. private ownership

5
Coase Theorem (1960)
  • In the absence of transaction costs, A and B will
    agree to achieve the efficient solution
    irrespective of whether A has the right to
    pollute or B has the right to amenity initially
  • In the presence of significant transaction costs
    that may prevent the reaching of the efficient
    solution through agreement, the assignment of
    property rights matters
  • The problem is to avoid the more serious harm gt
    a change of approach is necessary

6
Coases Assumptions
  • A world in which some producers or consumers are
    subject to externalities generated by other
    producers or consumers
  • Perfect information
  • Consumers and producers are price-takers
  • Costless court system for enforcing agreements
  • No income or wealth effects
  • No transaction costs
  • The initial assignment of property rights
    regarding the externalities does not matter for
    efficiency
  • If any of these conditions does not hold, the
    initial assignment of rights does matter

7
Coase also recognized
  • The assumption of no transaction costs involved
    in carrying out market transactions is very
    unrealistic
  • Arrangement of rights needs to be established by
    the legal system

8
Limitations of Coase
9
Criticisms of Coase
  • Bargaining may not occur
  • Imperfect information
  • Implementation problems
  • The role of transaction costs
  • Is the final allocation independent of the
    initial assignment of property rights?

10
Criticism (5) Is the final allocation
independent of the initial assignment of
property rights?
  • (a) The allocation of the initial entitlement
    does not matter when
  • (b) the initial delimitation of rights is known,
    when
  • (c) transaction costs are zero
  • and when
  • (d) preferences are exogenous to the initial
    setting of legal entitlements.

11
Willingness to Pay (WTP) andWillingness to
Accept (WTA)
  • WTP is the maximum amount of money an individual
    would voluntarily exchange to obtain an
    improvement (or avoid a decrement) in the
    environmental effects of concern
  • WTA is the least amount of money an individual
    would accept to forego an improvement (or endure
    a decrement) in the environmental effects of
    concern

12
  • Assumption (d) preferences are exogenous to the
    initial setting of legal entitlements
  • Income effects are zero or negligible
  • If the legal entitlement is granted over
    basic-goods, the good should have a lower value
    than the total income of each party to the
    transaction
  • The legal entitlement is granted over a good that
    has ready substitutes
  • The legal entitlement is granted over a good that
    has no or very low existence value
  • Instant endowment effects are zero or negligible.

13
The Endowment Effect
  • Explains difference between WTP and WTA
  • WTA usually higher than WTP
  • Reference position matters in trade (bias)
  • Ownership has value
  • Reduces set of mutually acceptable trades
  • Could be important in
  • deciding to whom to assign environmental property
    rights, especially transferrable pollution
    permits
  • choosing optimal tax/subsidy based on WTP or WTA

14
Examples
15
Fisheries
  • Open Access lt Limited Entry lt Quotas lt TURFs
  • Failures
  • New England groundfish (cod, haddock, etc.)
  • EEZ established in 1978, but stocks continued to
    decline
  • Limited Access limited days at sea, not
    absolute catch
  • Many unused licenses due to depleted stocks
  • Incentive to continue overfishing to prevent
    entry
  • Others (U.S. Abalone, Argentinian Hake)
  • Successes
  • Long Island Sound oyster industry (partial)
  • Others (ITQ successes)

16
Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) of the World
  • Wikipedia

17
UNCLOS III
  • Wikipedia

18
ITQs and Prevention of Fishery Collapse
  • Percent of fisheries collapsed with (dotted line)
    and without (solid line) ITQ management using a
    collapse threshold of 10 of historical maximum.
    The number of ITQ fisheries increases through
    time (right y axis and dashed line), and the rate
    of implementation has been accelerating (Costello
    et al. 2008).

19
Forests
  • Haiti and The Dominican Republic

20
Distribution of ownership of the worlds forests
  • Agrawal et al. 2008

21
Legal Issues Property Rights
22
Private vs. Public Property according to the
United States Supreme Court
23
The Takings Clause
  • Found in the Fifth Amendment
  • nor shall private property be taken for public
    use without just compensation
  • - How has the Supreme Court defined this?

24
Lucas v. South Carolina
  • Lucas purchased residential lots on the isle of
    palms
  • South Carolina law barred Lucas from development
  • Does the ban deprive Lucas of all economically
    viable use?
  • Supreme Court ruled Lucass property was rendered
    valueless

25
Dolan v. City of Tigard
  • Dolan wants to expand store and parking lot.
  • City of Tigard places conditions upon the
    expansion.
  • Did the citys conditions violate the takings
    clause?
  • Supreme Court ruled there must be an essential
    nexus to justify requirements.

26
Palazzolo v. Rhode Island
  • Palazzolo wished to develop a waterfront salt
    marsh.
  • Rhode Island already had a regulation protecting
    coastal wetlands.
  • May a property owner make a takings claim if he
    or she acquired the land after regulation?
  • Supreme Court ruled that takings claims could be
    made by future owners.

27
Tahoe v. Tahoe
  • Tahoe Regional Planning Agency prohibits
    development while considering land-use plan.
  • Sierra Preservation Council et al. claim the ban
    constitutes a taking.
  • Does a temporary development ban violate the
    takings clause of the Fifth Amendment?
  • Supreme Court ruled that a temporary ban did not
    violate takings clause.

28
Lingle v. Chevron
  • Hawaii enacted a limit on oil service station
    rent.
  • Chevron claimed the rent limit was a taking
    because it did not advance state interests.
  • Is a regulation a taking if it does not
    substantially advance legitimate state interests?
  • The Court ruled it was not a taking. They also
    developed a new test for what constitutes a
    taking.

29
New Takings Test
  • Previous test substantially advances formula
  • New Test
  • Weigh the severity of the burden imposed upon
    property rights, not the effectiveness of the
    regulation in furthering governmental interests.

30
Beyond Coase
31
Terry L. Andersons Principles of Efficient
Allocation
  • Rent dissipation can occur in the process of
    establishing private rights to a common property
    resource as well as in the use of a common
    property resource.
  • The rent dissipation from the process of
    establishing rights to a resource can be every
    bit as large as the rent dissipation from
    exploitation of the resource under common
    property rules.
  • When the process of establishing rights is
    determined by residual claimants (potential
    owners of the rents) there is a greater incentive
    to conserve on the resources used in that process
    than when the procedure is determined by
    non-claimants.

32
Property Rights on the Frontier
  • Expansion into the American West gives us an
    empirical example of what can happen when
    property rights are negotiated between interested
    parties.
  • Two distinct stages of property rights
    development with a notable difference in outcomes.

33
The History of Expansion
  • Initially, frontier lands are largely controlled
    or within the range of various Native American
    tribes. The US government forced evacuation of
    much of these lands by force or treaty. The
    Land Ordinance of 1785 established a system for
    property rights, but was largely unenforced on
    the expanding frontier.
  • American settlers move westward, creating
    organizations to establish property rights in the
    absence of federal enforcement.
  • After this period of expansion, the Homestead Act
    of 1862 established a new regime of allocation
    and enforcement of frontier property rights.

34
Intermediate Organizations
  • Settlers knew that eventually the federal
    government would enforce either the Land
    Ordinance or some new property rights regime.
  • In this environment, various types of claims
    associations sprang up to fill the void. Rules
    varied, but common threads were low
    administrative costs, simple registrations, and
    varying degrees and types of coercive power.
  • In comparison with the later Homestead Act, the
    requirements for land improvement were low.

35
Homestead Act of 1862
  • The Homestead Act allowed settlers to claim up to
    160 acres after 5 years of residence, or 6 months
    of residence 1.25/acre.
  • The Act required extensive land improvements and
    specified the investments in terms of cabin size,
    irrigation ditches, and planted trees.
  • Both the size of the plots and mandatory
    investment types were ill-suited for the large
    variety of claims on the frontier, and resulted
    in rent dissipation.

36
Public Lands
  • Andersons later work includes a suggestion that
    we privatize lands held by the Federal
    Government, including National Parks and Forest
    Service lands.
  • He contends that federal land management is
    inefficient, but also fails in its mission to
    protect and preserve valuable resources. He
    places most of this blame on poor incentives by
    the federal land management organizations for
    improving their policies.
  • Solution reallocation of federal lands to owners
    who have economic incentives to care for them.

37
Options for Divestiture
  • The Homestead Act
  • The Resource Acts/Squatters Acts
  • Federal Leasing Program/Leasing Pullback
  • Land Transfers to the States
  • Public-Private Land Trusts
  • Direct Land Sales

38
Auctioned Rights
  • The Scale and Scope of Divestiture
  • Land Partitions
  • Deed Rights
  • Transferability
  • Acknowledgement of Existing Rights
  • Block Sales
  • Public Land Share Certificates
  • Combinatorial Auctions

39
What about the Grand Canyon?
  • Do we give special dispensation to the Crown
    Jewels of the National Parks system?
  • Can we divide up rights within the parks, so that
    the recreational rights are separated from the
    mineral rights, for example?
  • Is there a reason to give special treatment to
    any property right over another?

40
Migratory Resources
  • What about common pool resources, or resources
    that move? How do we allocate rights to fish?
  • Anderson proposes rights based on stock levels
    and precise definitions of how much each
    rights-owner can claim.
  • How well does this work in the absence of perfect
    information? Does information cost outweigh the
    efficiency benefits?

41
The Future
42
Technology The Future of Environmental Property
Rights
  • Delineation of rights
  • Scope, infringement, value
  • Filling Information gaps
  • Data collection
  • Satellites, remote sensing, pollution tracking,
    internet
  • Analysis
  • Computing power, data mining, statistics, GIS
  • Dissemination
  • Internet, communication, search costs

43
The Future of Environmental Property Rights
(cont.)
  • Decision Making
  • Harm detection and quantification
  • Modeling and prediction
  • Determination of rightsholders
  • Compliance and Enforcement
  • Satellites, remote sensing, monitoring equipment
  • Improved technology will make property rights and
    Coasean bargaining applicable to a wider array of
    environmental circumstances

44
Conclusions
  • Coase works (sometimes)
  • Deviations from Coasean assumptions can offset
    efficiency gains
  • Initial assignment of rights matters in the real
    world
  • Scale matters
  • Match rights unit to resource unit
  • Governments control the assignment and
    enforcement of property rights
  • Science is essential (environmental and social)
  • Economically efficient outcome might not be
    socially optimal outcome
  • Technology will expand scope of environmental
    property rights
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