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Exploring the General Equilibrium Costs of Sector-Specific Environmental Regulations

Alex Marten, Richard Garbaccio and Ann Wolverton

No 201806, NCEE Working Paper Series from National Center for Environmental Economics, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Abstract: The requisite scope of analysis to adequately estimate the social cost of environmental regulations has been subject to much discussion. The literature has demonstrated that engineering or partial equilibrium cost estimates likely underestimate the social cost of large-scale environmental regulations and environmental taxes. However, the conditions under which general equilibrium (GE) analysis adds value to welfare analysis for single-sector technology or performance standards, the predominant policy intervention in practice, remains an open question. Using a numerical computable general equilibrium (CGE) model, we investigate the GE effects of regulations across different sectors, abatement technologies, and regulatory designs. Our results show that even for small regulations the GE effects are significant, and that engineering estimates of compliance costs can substantially underestimate the social cost of single-sector environmental regulations. We find the downward bias from using engineering costs to approximate social costs depends on the input composition of abatement technologies and the regulated sector.

Keywords: environmental regulation; general equilibrium; social costs (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D58 Q52 Q58 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 41 pages
Date: 2018-10
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr, nep-cmp, nep-env and nep-reg
References: Add references at CitEc
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https://www.epa.gov/environmental-economics/explor ... ecific-environmental First version, 2018 (application/pdf)

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Journal Article: Exploring the General Equilibrium Costs of Sector-Specific Environmental Regulations (2019) Downloads
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