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Review of Environmental Economics and Policy Advance Access originally published online on June 3, 2008
Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 2008 2(2):175-193; doi:10.1093/reep/ren007
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Local Solutions to Global Problems: Climate Change Policies and Regulatory Jurisdiction

James Bushnell*, Carla Peterman** and Catherine Wolfram***

* UC Energy Institute and NBER; E-mail: bushnell{at}haas.berkeley.edu.
** UC Berkeley; E-mail: cpeterman{at}berkeley.edu.
*** UC Berkeley and NBER; E-mail: wolfram{at}haas.berkeley.edu.

This article considers the efficacy of various types of environmental regulations when they are applied locally to pollutants, such as greenhouse gases, whose damages extend beyond the jurisdiction of the local regulator. While previous work has noted the possibility for leakage, whereby polluting sources move outside the jurisdiction of the regulation, we identify an additional problem that occurs when policies are targeted downstream, at consumers of goods whose production creates pollution. Specifically, we show how consumer-based policies can be circumvented by a simple reshuffling of who is buying from whom. We argue that the leakage problems are more pronounced with regulations that impose costs on firms than with subsidies that reward production of low-polluting goods. Reshuffling problems are more pronounced when the options for compliance are more flexible, such as with market-based regulations. We conclude that localities may be able to have the greatest impact on global pollutants when they enact relatively inflexible regulations such as efficiency standards or targeted subsidies.


JEL Classification: Q48, Q54, Q58

We are grateful to Max Auffhammer, Dallas Burtraw, Alex Farrell, Larry Goulder, Dan Skopec, and Rob Stavins for helpful discussions and comments.


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