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Rethinking the optimal level of environmental quality: justifications for strict environmental policy
Institution:1. Department of Economics, University of Arkansas, AR, USA;2. Environmental Studies Program and Department of Economics, Washington and Lee University, USA;3. Department of Economics, Lehigh University, 621 Taylor Street, Bethlehem, PA 18015-3117, USA;4. Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA;1. Hospital San Roque, Servicio de Endocrinología, Diabetes y Nutrición, Paraná, Entre Ríos, Argentine;2. Sociedad Argentina de Diabetes, Buenos Aires, Argentine;3. Hospital Cosme Argerich, Servicio de Adolescencia, Ciudad Autónoma de Bs. As, Buenos Aires, Argentine;4. Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Nutricionales de Salta, Salta, Argentine;5. Instituto Privado de Especialidades Pediátricas y Gineco- obstétricas, Córdoba, Argentine;6. Hospital Regional de Ushuaia, Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentine;7. Hospital José Ramón Vidal, Corrientes, Argentine;8. Hospital Municipal Nuestra Señora del Carmen, Chacabuco, Buenos Aires, Argentine;9. Facultad de Bioquímica y Ciencias Biológicas, UNL, Santa Fe, Argentine;1. Glaucoma Service, Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;2. Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;3. Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;1. Department of Economics, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701, United States;2. Department of Economics, Finance and Legal Studies, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States
Abstract:Traditional environmental theory suggests that the optimal level of a pollution emission occurs when the marginal damage created by the emissions is equal to the marginal cost of reducing the emissions. We argue that the benefits from reducing pollution should be much more broadly defined to include at least three other sources of benefits. First, we develop a game-theoretic model in which firms may under-invest in cost-saving ‘green technologies’. Second, we demonstrate that consideration of future damages and abatement costs leads to a lower current optimal pollution level than that obtained in traditional models. Finally, we show that ecological complexity creates indirect pathways by which greater pollution increases the likelihood of generating irreversible environmental damage. This broader definition of the benefits of pollution abatement yields an optimal level of pollution that may actually be less than the level at which conventionally-measured marginal damages are equal to marginal abatement costs. Thus, environmental policy should be stricter.
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