The present article investigates the use of performance standards to correct environmental externalities. Each firm in an industry emits waste in the production process, and, in turn, the average waste emissions of the industry adversely affect the firm's productivity. The firm, which incurs sunk costs when employing capital to abate waste emissions, is uncertain about the efficiency of capital. The firm will underestimate environmental externalities and will therefore pollute more than is socially efficient. To correct this tendency, the regulator can set a limit on either emissions or the emission-output ratio at the socially efficient level. The firm will invest more, produce more, and pollute less when the regulator implements the former than when the regulator implements the latter. © Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics society Inc. and Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2004.
CITATION STYLE
Jou, J. B. (2004). Environment, irreversibility and optimal effluent standards. Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, 48(1), 127–158. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8489.2004.00235.x
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