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Can Stricter Environmental Standards Benefit the Industry and Enhance Welfare

Y. Hossein Farzin ()

Annals of Economics and Statistics, 2004, issue 75-76, 223-255

Abstract: This paper argues that the industrialists' claim that stricter environmental standards reduce the industry output, competition, and hence social welfare rests solely on the "cost" effect of a stricter standard and ignores its "demand" effect. It considers situations where firms' pollution abatement increases the industry demand, but, because of inability to coordinate their emissions reductions, and thus free-riding problem, they can not act in their own collective interest. The paper examines the effects of a stricter standard in such situations both at the individual firm and industry levels and when entry/exit is free as well as when the number of firms is fixed. It identifies conditions under which a stricter standard leads to a larger number of firms in the industry, a greater industry output, and a lower total pollution in the long-run; and to higher levels of firms' profits and output in the short-run. It also shows that for the industry to survive, a minimum pollution standard may be necessary. Further, it analyzes the welfare effects of a stricter standard and indicates situations in which the regulator may prefer no standards to weak ones.

Date: 2004
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (7)

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