Detrimental externalities, pollution rights, and the ``Coase theorem
From MaRDI portal
Publication:663207
DOI10.1007/s00199-011-0602-1zbMath1276.91082OpenAlexW2109726157MaRDI QIDQ663207
John S. Chipman, Guoqiang Tian
Publication date: 14 February 2012
Published in: Economic Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00199-011-0602-1
Environmental economics (natural resource models, harvesting, pollution, etc.) (91B76) Special types of economic markets (including Cournot, Bertrand) (91B54)
Related Items
Revisiting the Coase theorem, Taxing pollution: agglomeration and welfare consequences, Taxes versus quantities for a stock pollutant with endogenous abatement costs and asymmetric information, Nested externalities and polycentric institutions: Must we wait for global solutions to climate change before taking actions at other scales?, Carbon leakages: a general equilibrium view, Capital growth in a global warming model: Will China and India sign a climate treaty?, Intergenerational equity, efficiency, and constructibility, Sustainable exploitation of a natural resource: a satisfying use of Chichilnisky's criterion, Unspoken ethical issues in the climate affair: insights from a theoretical analysis of negotiation mandates, Economic theory and the global environment, Walrasian prices in markets with tradable rights, Sustainable markets with short sales, Global warming and economic externalities, Sustainable recursive social welfare functions, Stable agreements through liability rules: a multi-choice game approach to the social cost problem, ``It's all in the mix! -- Internalizing externalities with R\&D subsidies and environmental liability
Cites Work
- Taxes versus quantities for a stock pollutant with endogenous abatement costs and asymmetric information
- Capital growth in a global warming model: Will China and India sign a climate treaty?
- Intergenerational equity, efficiency, and constructibility
- Sustainable exploitation of a natural resource: a satisfying use of Chichilnisky's criterion
- Unspoken ethical issues in the climate affair: insights from a theoretical analysis of negotiation mandates
- Sustainable markets with short sales
- Global warming and economic externalities
- Sustainable recursive social welfare functions
- Theory of negative consumption externalities with applications to the economics of happiness
- Who should abate carbon emissions? An international viewpoint
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item