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Efficiency, the Environment and Property Rights

Efficiency, the Environment and Property Rights. 1. Efficiency, the Environment and Property Rights. What is economic efficiency? How does the market secure efficiency? Equalizing social and private costs and benefits in the face of externalities Where do property rights figure in the story?.

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Efficiency, the Environment and Property Rights

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  1. Efficiency, the Environment and Property Rights 1

  2. Efficiency, the Environment and Property Rights • What is economic efficiency? • How does the market secure efficiency? • Equalizing social and private costs and benefits in the face of externalities • Where do property rights figure in the story? 2

  3. Different Notions of Efficiency • Pareto efficiency • Allocative efficiency • Distributive efficiency • X-efficiency or technical efficiency • Dynamic efficiency 3

  4. Market Solutions • No externalities • Fully specified property rights (exclusivity, transferability and enforceability) • Price-takers on both sides of market • Perfect information • Instant adjustment • Constant returns to scale 4

  5. Product-mix Efficiency 5

  6. Market Imperfection: Monopoly With competition MC=Pc, output at Qc With monopoly MR=MC, with output at Qm and price up from Pc to Pm Producers surplus maximized, but deadweight losses Policy solutions: regulation, re-assignation of property rights? 6

  7. Efficiency: Economic, Social and Technical • Economic: use resources such that they minimize costs and maximize profits (private costs = private benefits) • Social: use resources such that they minimize costs and maximize profits (but this time private + social costs = private + social benefits) • Technical: minimize inputs with respect to outputs  minimizing energy use • Absent these conditions: externalities, inadequately specified property rights 7

  8. Enter Externalities and Market Failure • Externalities are un-priced in the market, leading to under-supply of positive externalities and over-supply of positive ones • Four main policy solutions: • Pigovian tax • Regulatory approach using the market(e.g. emission permits) • “Pure” regulation • Property right assignation (Coase) 8

  9. Pigovian Tax 9

  10. The Coasian analysis • According to Coase, we can use property right assignation rather than taxes • This has the same effect of achieving an efficient outcome as long as property rights are fully allocated • Argument: What matters is the overall cost and benefit • Issue can be resolved by negotiation, don’t need fiscal policy or regulation beyond property rights • Free market environmentalism? 10

  11. Bargaining on Externalities $ MEC MB a c b d Hours of music 0 Mx Mo 11

  12. Bargaining on Externalities (cont.) $ MEC MB a c b d Hours of music 0 Mx Mo 12

  13. Assumptions Behind Coasian Solution • Markets work • No negotiation or transaction costs • Need small numbers • All parties enjoy full information (no gaming) • No distributional problems to worry about, and allocation is efficient • No wealth effects following bargaining • Allocation of rights might influence behaviour of other parties in same business (strategic reactions) 13

  14. What do property rights provide? • Demsetz claims that they are an internalization of externalities • Adjustment of property rights are an adjustment to externalities • Example: forced labor • Property rights originate under scarcities in particular environmental scarcities 14

  15. Problems raised by Dasgupta and Heal • Property rights are not created in a vacuum • Problem often comes from partially defined property rights • Coase and Demsetz assume symmetry which might not exist • They implicitly assume unique equilibrium • Problem: Multiple equilibria 15

  16. Multiple equilibria 16

  17. Solutions • In these cases, solutions have to be revealed to producers • Sometimes solutions have to be imposed 17

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