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Trading for the Future: Signaling in Permit Markets

Bård Harstad
Northwestern University - Kellogg School of Management

Gunnar A. Eskeland
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration; Foundation for Research in Economics and Business Administration


October 6, 2009

CMS-EMS Discussion Paper No. 1429

Abstract:     
Permits markets are celebrated as a political instrument since they allow (i) firms to equalize marginal costs through trade and (ii) the regulator to distribute the burden in a politically desirable way. These two concerns, however, may conflict in a dynamic setting. Anticipating the regulator's future desire to give more permits to firms that need them, the firms purchase permits to signal their need. This raises the price above marginal costs and the market becomes inefficient. If the social cost of pollution is high and the government intervenes frequently in the market, the distortions are greater than the gains from trade and non-tradable permits are better. The analysis helps to understand permit markets and how they should be designed.

Keywords: Tradable permits, time inconsistency, plan vs. market

JEL Classifications: H23, Q58, P48, D82

Working Paper Series

Date posted: September 07, 2007 ; Last revised: October 11, 2009

Suggested Citation

Harstad, Bård and Eskeland, Gunnar A., Trading for the Future: Signaling in Permit Markets (October 6, 2009). CMS-EMS Discussion Paper No. 1429. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1012468


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Contact Information

Bård Harstad (Contact Author)
Northwestern University - Kellogg School of Management ( email )
2001 Sheridan Road
Evanston, IL 60208
United States
HOME PAGE: http://www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/faculty/harstad/htm/
Gunnar A. Eskeland
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration ( email )
Helleveien 30
Oslo Norway
+47 55959699 (Phone)
Foundation for Research in Economics and Business Administration ( email )
Breiviksveien 40
N-5045 Bergen United States
+47 55959699 (Phone)
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