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Public Policies for Natural Resources

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Public Policies for Natural Resources Using government to correct for market failures Why public policy? Try to promote economic efficiency by correcting for market ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Public Policies for Natural Resources


1
Public Policies for Natural Resources
  • Using government to correct for market failures

2
Why public policy?
  • Try to promote economic efficiency by correcting
    for market failure
  • To redistribute benefits and/or costs of natural
    resource use
  • Among members of current generation
  • Among generations

3
What is public policy?
  • Collective actions through government
  • Results from government decision-making process

4
Types of public policies
  • Incentive based policies
  • Market based incentives
  • Government sponsored incentives
  • Direct public action
  • Command and control (Regulation)
  • Public production

5
Incentive based policies
  • Market based incentives correct for market
    failure by establishing and enforcing property
    rights and then allowing the market to work
  • Examples
  • Establishing water rights
  • Tradable fishing quotas

6
Incentive based policies
  • Government sponsored incentives
  • Taxes or fees in markets where the price is too
    low
  • Examples fees for fishing in public waters
    grazing on public lands
  • Subsidies in markets where the quantity is too
    low
  • Examples providing free tree saplings for soil
    conservation investments by farmers

7
Direct public action
  • Command and control refers to government issuing
    orders, promulgating regulations regarding
    access and use of natural resources
  • Examples size and quantity restrictions on catch
    in fisheries habitat protection to preserve
    endangered species

8
Direct public action
  • Direct public production of public goods and
    services that the market would not produce enough
    of.
  • Examples National parks, wildlife refuges and
    forests public beaches flood control projects

9
Market based incentives Property right policies
  • Correcting for market failure through the
    assignment (and enforcement) of property rights

10
Property right structures
  • Private property access and use are under the
    control of an individual person or corporation
  • State property a unit of government controls
    access and use
  • Common property a specific group of individuals
    jointly have access and use rights
  • Open access absence of any property rights

11
Private property characteristics
  • A complete private property rights structure
    includes
  • All resources are privately owned
  • Rights are enforceable
  • Rights are transferable
  • Rights are separable
  • E.g. mineral rights, development rights

12
Rights assignments methods
  • Who gets property rights when private rights are
    developed?
  • Apportion among current users
  • Homesteading
  • Lottery
  • Auction to highest bidders

13
Rights assignment methods
  • Does it matter to the final outcome how or to
    whom the rights are assigned?
  • Ronald Coase argued that it will not matter
    because a post assignment market exchange will
    occur if the initial assignment does not go to
    those who value the resources the highest
    Coase Theorem

14
Coase theorem
  • The initial assignment of rights does not matter
    to economic efficiency
  • If the rights are not assigned to those who value
    them the most, those assigned the rights will get
    offers to sell the rights to those who value them
    most thereby insuring maximum net benefits are
    derived from use of the resource

15
Coase theorem Solved problem 1
  • An 100 acre wood is currently open access
  • Chris Robin lives next to the woodland and uses
    it for recreation
  • LG enterprises, a logging company is interested
    in harvesting the timber
  • LG pays 50 per acre for timber land in the
    area, so the property is worth 5,000 to the
    logging firm
  • The government plans to assign property rights to
    one of the two
  • Will the rights be held or traded?

16
Solved problem 1
  • Scenario 1
  • Rights are assigned to LG
  • Chris Robin offers to buy the land for 3 pots of
    honey.
  • LG turns down the offer
  • Conclusion land is worth more to LG than to
    Chris Robin. Rights have been assigned to highest
    valued use.

17
Solved problem 1
  • Scenario 2
  • Rights are assigned to C. Robin.
  • LG offers to buy the land for 5000.
  • Mr. Robin accepts the offer
  • Conclusion land is worth more to LG than to Mr.
    Robin. Rights have been traded and reallocated to
    highest valued use

18
Solved problem 1
  • Scenario 3
  • Rights are assigned to C. Robin.
  • LG offers to buy the land for 5000.
  • Mr. Robin declines the offer
  • Conclusion land is worth more to Mr. Robin than
    to Mr. Robin. Rights have been assigned to the
    highest valued use

19
Coase theorem
  • Complications
  • Transaction costs
  • Income effects
  • Enforcement costs

20
Complications high transactions costs
  • Example of transactions costs preventing post
    assignment exchange
  • Rights to logging in a 10,000 acre forest are
    assigned by giving each of 100 families in the
    area rights to 100 acres.
  • The net benefits to each family of logging one
    acre using their own labor and capital are 40
  • Total net benefits from logging by the families
    40 10,000 400,000

21
Complications high transactions costs
  • Total net benefits to Logging Giant Inc. of
    logging are 500,000, 50 per acre
  • If rights assigned to LG Inc., it harvests the
    timber
  • If rights assigned to families, LG Inc. must
    negotiate for the sale of the rights. Would have
    to pay at least 40 per acre.
  • If the costs of negotiating each trade exceed 10
    per acre, the cost per acre would exceed 50, the
    most LG is WTP
  • No post assignment exchange, rights remain with
    families, yielding less net benefits!

22
Complications income effects
  • Income effects
  • WTP is bound by ability to pay
  • Willingness to sell, WTS is not

23
Complications income effects
  • Scenario 2 revisited
  • If the government assigns rights to the 100 acre
    wood to C. Robin he would not sell for less than
    6,000 but he cannot pay more than 3 pots of
    honey.
  • LG is only WTP 5,000. No trade is made.

24
Complications high enforcement costs
  • Enforcement costs if the costs of enforcing
    respect for a property rights assignment exceed
    the net benefits, the assignment reduces social
    welfare

25
Complications high enforcement costs
  • In the example of logging rights, suppose the
    government assigns the rights to LG, Inc. which
    intends to log the land next year
  • In the meantime, the local families go into the
    forest to harvest timber for their own use as
    they have been doing for years before the rights
    assignment.

26
Complications high enforcement costs
  • The net social benefits of LG logging are
    500,000 if the forest remains in its current
    state
  • The cost of hiring forest rangers and prosecuting
    trespassers is 700,000 over the next year.
  • Society suffers a net loss of 200,000 if rights
    assignment is enforced!

27
I.b. Government sponsored incentive policies for
external costs
  • Use taxes, fees or charges to correct for the
    presence of external costs.
  • Forces producer to face the full costs of
    production.

28
External cost example revisited
  • Socially efficiency dictates producing quantity
    at which MSC WTP
  • Add a fee payable to the government equal to the
    external cost, MSC-MPC at the socially efficient
    quantity
  • 112.5-87.525

29
External cost example revisited
  • MSC MPC at q of 150 is 112.5-87.525
  • A fee of 25 makes MPC MSC at the socially
    efficient quantity.
  • Producer than chooses quantity where MPCfee
    WTP, i.e. 150!

30
I.b. Government sponsored incentive policies for
external benefits
  • Offer a subsidy to either the producer or the
    buyer
  • A subsidy to the producer lowers costs, shifting
    supply to the right
  • A subsidy to the buyer lowers price, shifting
    demand to the right

31
Subsidy to producer

Quantity of trees
32
Subsidy to buyer

Quantity of trees
33
Direct public action- commands
  • Command/regulations a legal solution to market
    failure
  • Government regulations mandate socially optimal
    level of production
  • Assumption that laws and regulations will be
    obeyed

34
Direct public action - production
  • Government produces or contracts for private
    production of a public good or service
  • E.g. flood control project Army Corps of
    Engineers usually prepares preliminary design
    alternatives and contracts for final design and
    construction

35
Direct public action
  • Problems faced by government planners
  • Information on WTP and costs
  • Enforcement
  • Rent seeking by private interests
  • Lack of incentives to choose efficient policies
    among government planners

36
Direct public action
  • Will government action remedy market failure or
    perhaps worsen the allocation of resources?
  • Should compare results from market failure with
    results from imperfect public policies.

37
Direct public action
  • Principle of subsidiarity assign responsibility
    to the lowest level of government possible
  • Land use to local government
  • Inland fisheries to states
  • Marine fisheries to federal
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