当大堤决堤:多污染物市场能否在点-非点市场参与上决堤?

Carson J. Reeling, R. Horan, Cloé Garnache
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引用次数: 2

摘要

高交易成本和参与率低困扰着水质交易,并阻碍市场实现预期的效率提升。之前很少有研究探讨交易成本和市场绩效之间的关系。我们开发了一个包含交易成本的点-非点交易模型。点源(PS)产生单一污染物,而非点源(NPS)产生多种互补污染物。交易是通过双边谈判进行的:受监管的PS必须找到不受监管的NPS并与之签订合同,以获得污染抵消。每个PS承担的搜索和签约成本取决于潜在贸易伙伴的数量。国民年金部门不支付搜索费用,但可能会产生一些合同费用。这些成本可能会影响参与决策。交易成本可能产生战略互补性,从而导致多重均衡,其特点是市场参与程度或大或小。市场达到的均衡取决于资源对其他人参与的期望。我们探讨了不同的市场结构对交易结果的影响。允许NPS参与多个不同的市场,针对它们减少的每一种污染物,可能对交易的吸引力影响不大。相比之下,一体化市场可以降低两种来源的交易成本。在一体化市场中,受监管的污染者可以通过持有任何一种污染物减排产生的许可证来达到上限。这在充分参与均衡周围产生了更大的吸引力,从而可能提高污染交易的效率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When the Levee Breaks: Can Multi‐Pollutant Markets Break the Dam on Point–Nonpoint Market Participation?
High transaction costs and thin participation plague water quality trading and prevent markets from delivering expected efficiency gains. Little prior work explores the relationship between transactions costs and market performance. We develop a model of point–nonpoint trading that includes transactions costs. Point sources (PS) generate a single pollutant, whereas nonpoint sources (NPS) generate multiple, complementary pollutants. Trading occurs via bilateral negotiation: regulated PS must find and contract with unregulated NPS to obtain pollution offsets. Each PS bears search and contracting costs that depend on the number of potential trading partners. The NPS sector does not pay search costs but may incur some contracting costs. These costs may affect participation decisions. Transactions costs may generate strategic complementarities that lead to multiple equilibria, characterized by large or small levels of market participation. The equilibrium at which the market arrives depends on sources' expectations about others' participation. We explore the effect of different market structures on trading outcomes. Allowing NPS to participate in multiple, distinct markets for each pollutant they abate may have little effect on the basin of attraction for trading. In contrast, integrated markets—in which regulated polluters can meet their caps by holding permits generated from abatement of either pollutant—can reduce transactions costs for both sources. This generates a larger basin of attraction around the full‐participation equilibrium and thus may improve the efficiency of pollution trading.
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