scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental Taxes and the Choice of Green Technology

TLDR
In this paper, a profit-maximizing monopolistic firm facing price-dependent demand selects emissions control technology, production quantity, and price in response to the tax, subsidy, and rebate levels set by the regulator.
Abstract
We study several important aspects of using environmental taxes to motivate the choice of innovative and �green" emissions-reducing technologies as well as the role of fixed cost subsidies and consumer rebates in this process. In our model, a profit-maximizing monopolistic firm facing price-dependent demand selects emissions control technology, production quantity, and price in response to the tax, subsidy, and rebate levels set by the regulator. The available technologies vary in environmental efficiency as well as in the fixed and variable costs. Both the optimal policy for the firm and the social-welfare maximizing policy for the regulator are analyzed. We find that the firm's reaction to an increase in taxes may be non-monotone: while an initial increase in taxes may motivate a switch to a greener technology, further tax increases may motivate a reverse switch. For the regulator, we compare the social welfare achievable in the centralized system (which serves as an upper bound) to the highest level achievable under different classes of environmental policies. If the regulator is limited to a tax-only policy, then when the regulator is moderately concerned with environmental impacts, the tax level that maximizes social welfare simultaneously motivates the choice of clean technology and closes the gap to the upper bound; however, both low and high levels of societal environmental concerns may lead to the choice of dirty technology and significant welfare losses as compared to the centralized case. Supplementing the environmental taxation with fixed cost subsidies and consumer rebates can eliminate this effect, expanding the range of parameters over which the green technology is chosen and often closing the welfare gap to the centralized solution.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Green product supply chain contracts considering environmental responsibilities

TL;DR: In this paper, several cooperation contracts within a green product supply chain and investigate their environmental performance are investigated. But, the authors do not consider the impact of the cooperation on the overall supply chain performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Supply chain coordination with green technology under cap-and-trade regulation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the production and emission abatement decisions of a make-to-order supply chain consisting of a manufacturer and a retailer under cap-and-trade regulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Managing new and remanufactured products to mitigate environmental damage under emissions regulation

TL;DR: This paper investigates the impact of emissions taxes on the optimal production and pricing decisions of a manufacturer who could remanufacture its own product using a leader-follower Stackelberg game model, and delineates how emissions taxes can be instituted to realize the inherent economic, environmental and social benefits of remanufacturing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Joint decisions on inventory replenishment and emission reduction investment under different emission regulations

TL;DR: In this paper, a retailer's joint decisions on inventory replenishment and carbon emission reduction investment under three carbon emission regulation policies are analyzed, including carbon cap, tax and cap-and-trade policies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainability investment under cap-and-trade regulation

TL;DR: This paper examines the order quantity of the retailer and sustainability investment of the manufacturer for the decentralized supply chain with one retailer and one manufacturer and the centralized case, and finds that the sustainability investment efficiency has a significant impact on the optimal solutions.
References
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

Environmental Taxation and the “Double Dividend:” A Reader’s Guide

TL;DR: Taxes have been used as instruments of environmental protection for a long time as mentioned in this paper, and the notion that taxes can improve welfare outcomes by internalizing externalities traces back at least as far as Pigou (1938) and is a central tenet of environmental economics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental policy and technological change

TL;DR: The relationship between technological change and environmental policy has received increasing attention from scholars and policy makers alike over the past ten years as discussed by the authors, partly because the environmental impacts of social activity are significantly affected by technological change, and partly because environmental policy interventions themselves create new constraints and incentives that affect the process of technological developments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Firm incentives to promote technological change in pollution control: Reply

TL;DR: In this paper, the process of technological change in pollution control is broken into three basic steps: innovation, diffusion, and optimal agency response, and firm incentives to promote these steps are examined under five regulatory regimes: direct controls, emission subsidies, emission taxes, free marketable permits, and auctioned marketable permit.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effect of Competition on Recovery Strategies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors develop models to support a manufacturer's recovery strategy in the face of a competitive threat on the remanufactured product market, and find that a firm may choose to remanufacture or preemptively collect its used products to deter entry even when the firm would not have chosen to do so under a pure monopoly environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Market Segmentation and Product Technology Selection for Remanufacturable Products

TL;DR: This paper solves the joint pricing and production technology selection problem faced by a manufacturer that considers introducing a remanufacturable product in a market that consists of heterogeneous consumers.
Related Papers (5)