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Emissions Trading, Firm Heterogeneity, and Intra-Industry Reallocations in the Long Run

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Emissions Trading, Firm Heterogeneity, and Intra-Industry Reallocations in the Long Run

Design of environmental regulation has substantial implications for size distribution and mass of firms within and across industries in the long run. In a general equilibrium model that accounts for endogenous entry and exit of heterogeneous firms, the welfare impacts of emissions trading are analytically decomposed into the effects on economy-wide income, mass of firms, firm size distribution, output price markups, and factor prices. Distortionary impacts on size distribution and permit price depend on the conditionality of permit distribution, interactions between changes in entry-exit conditions and in aggregate accounting conditions, the factor intensity of entry, and coverage of non-pollution-intensive sectors in emissions trading. 

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University of Hawaii

Environmental and Resource Economics, Applied Microeconomics, Applied Game Theory

15 Oct 2014 (Wednesday)

4pm - 5.30pm

Meeting Room 5.1, Level 5
School of Economics 
Singapore Management University
90 Stamford Road
Singapore 178903