Title: EEP 101/Econ 125 lecture 7 Property rights
1EEP 101/Econ 125 lecture 7Property rights
2Outline
- Property rights and the Coase Theorem
- The economics of clean up and restoration
- Limited information
- Political economy models
- Capture
- Rent seeking
3Property right and the environment
- Property right define entitlement that can not eb
taken away - Polluter may have rights to pollute-
- precedent establishes right in many cases
- A chemical plant got the right to pollute when a
plant is established - Victims( pollutees) may have rights for
protection from pollutions - Downstream users have rights to clean water
4The Coase theorem
- Assumptions
- property rights are clear and enfrocable
- Full information
- Zero transaction costs
- Then
- No need for intervention in cases of
externalities - Pareto optimality
- Regardless of initial distribution of rights
5Negotiations and the Coase outcomes
- Clear property rights lead to Pareto efficient
outcomes - The exact distribution of surplus gain depend on
negotiation - We assumed the parties are splitting the benefits
- In case of polluter rights the pollutee pay the
polluters not to pollute - In case of pollutee rights the polluter pays the
pollution to pollute
6Initial outcome B Pollutee pays CEBD,gains CEF
Final outcome C Polluter gains BCE Social gains
FCB
Gain to polluters
F
D
Polluter marginal benefits
Marginal pollutee benefits
C
E
A
D
B
Pollution
CASE OF POLLUTER RIGHTS
7Initial outcome A Polluter pays GCDA,gains DCG
Final outcome C Polluter gains GCA Social gain
DCA
Gain to polluters
F
D
Polluter marginal benefits
Marginal pollutee benefits
C
E
G
A
D
B
CASE OF POLLUTEE RIGHTS
Pollution
8Implications and limitations of Coase theorem
- A functioning legal system is key for
environmental policy - Externalities-caused by
- Missing markets
- Undefined property rights
- Market failure
- The Coase theorem works when
- Small number of actor-low transaction costs
- It does not work when there are many parties and
negotiation and collaboration are costly
9Liability rules
- Allow violation of property rights but imposes
penalties - Polluter has to pay damages for accidental water
contamination.Has to pay a penalty for
intentional - Pollution tax is a liability payment
- Negligence Rules Penalize individuals for not
exercising sufficient care in action. - Due care standards-set basis for liability
- A farmer may not be liable for run off damages if
she performed due care. - Part of policy is establishing these standards
10(No Transcript)
11Full Restoration May Be Suboptimal
Price
MC of Restoration
MB of Restoration
Q
Quantity
Q Full Restoration Optimal Restoration
12Waste management
- Liability may be retroactive- New owners are
liable for pollution of old ones. - It leads to care in purchases of new properties
and prevent people from polluting and selling - In cases of ex Soviet Union may prevent
development-many sites are worth to buyer less
than clean up cost- - Government may pay if public gain from clean up
and development is greater than private gain
13Point vs. non point source pollution
- When pollution can be assigned to pollution we
have polluters we have source point - Example-when each smoke stack is monitored
- When individual pollution can not be assigned we
have non point source - Pollution at point source can be taxed
- In case of non point pollution of individuals can
not be observed- other action related to
pollution can be regulated or taxed
14Contamination by firms-point vs non point
- Suppose that there are N firms, each firm is
index by n who assume values from 1 to N - Pollution of the nth farmer is Zn.It is produced
by the input of this farmer Xn.This input is
generating output Yn. - The production function of the nth producer is
YnFn(Xn). The pollution function of the nth
producer is ZnGn(Xn) - Suppose output price is P, input price is W and
pollution damage per unit is V.
15Case of point source
- If the policy maker can observe Zn, he will
charge the nth firm VZ. It will lead to optimal
outcome. - The optimal choice of the firm will be
- The optimality is
- At optimal outcome
- value of marginal benefit of production is equal
to - input price plus
- marginal pollution damage cost
16Example
- If
- Optimality condition
- Implying
- If
- A tax of 2 will lead to optimality if Zn is
observable. - If Zn is not observables but Xn is a tax on input
2VcnXn.It will also be optimal.In our case the
input tax is 12.
17Heterogeneity
- Suppose all firms have the same production
function, but vary pollution function. - 50 have cn1and the other 50 have cn0
- If the policy maker observes Zn
- Firms with cn1 pay tax of 2 per unit of
pollution and produce 3 units making - The clean firms have Xn.5(20-2)9 and make
- Average income is 54 per firm
18Non point source
- If only Xn is not observable the policy maker
will optimize average behavior - So the tax will be based 2 per unit of output
resulting in output of Xn.5(20-2)/(11)6 - The profit per firm will be
- The social welfare will be 72 for clean firms
and 0 for dirty ones. Since the cost fo their
pollution is 236. - Average welfare is 36 per firm
- Information will generate welfare gain of 9 per
firm.
19The Gain From Information
Avg. MEC
MECH
MB
A
High Tax
MECL
C
Avg. Tax
E
Low Tax
B
D
The area ABC is loss of pollution generated by
dirty firms. The area CDE is loss of insufficient
pollution by cleaner firms.
20Investment in Monitoring
- Monitoring of pollution allows discrimination
among polluters and non-polluters and increases
welfare. - If monitoring cost is greater than the gain from
information, do not invest. - Government can induce monitoring by assuming that
everyone is a heavy polluter and is being taxed
accordingly. Refunds will be issued to firms that
prove to be clean. - This leads to an industry of monitoring and
environmental auditors.