Abstract

This paper presents a theoretical analysis of the nature of an optimal emissions tax when firms’ emissions are not perfectly observable, specifically in two types of market structure: perfect competition and Cournot competition with and without free market entry. The purpose is to examine how the optimal tax is affected by enforcement costs and the market structure. We find that market imperfections and enforcement costs push the optimal tax lower than the marginal damage to society when the number of firms in the market is exogenous. However, when the number of firms is determined endogenously, enforcement costs generate two countervailing effects on the optimal tax. The direct effect is that higher marginal enforcement costs push the optimal tax lower. The indirect effect of enforcement costs results from the role of the tax as a deterrent to entry. Limiting entry and hence the resources expended on enforcement improves social welfare. Thus, the overall effect of enforcement costs on the optimal tax depends on the strength of direct relative to indirect effects of these costs when there is free entry and exit.

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