Monitoring Abatement in the Presence of an Import Quota on CERs

21 Pages Posted: 18 Nov 2015

See all articles by Sabine Aresin

Sabine Aresin

Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance

Date Written: September 17, 2015

Abstract

I analyze whether or not a monitoring problem regarding abroad abatement can justify the import quotas on abroad emission certificates applied by several emission trading schemes. For this purpose I extend the Becker (1968) Crime and Punishment model by heterogeneity in the observability of compliance. I do so by incorporating a firm’s cost minimizing choice of domestic and abroad CO2 abatement into a monitoring framework in which firms have to meet an exogenously set emission standard. I find that the government can implement the first best abatement allocation under incomplete information, however, under incomplete information this allocation is not socially optimal. Instead, the government should in the presence of a monitoring problem introduce an import quota for abroad abatement that shifts the allocation from abroad to domestic abatement.

Keywords: Clean Development Mechanism, Import Quota on Certified Emission Reductions, Import Restrictions, Green House Gas Offset, Abatement, Monitoring, Incomplete Information, Information Asymmetry

JEL Classification: D21, D82, F53, Q58

Suggested Citation

Aresin, Sabine, Monitoring Abatement in the Presence of an Import Quota on CERs (September 17, 2015). Working Paper of the Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance No. 2015-11, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2661937 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2661937

Sabine Aresin (Contact Author)

Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance ( email )

Marstallplatz 1
Munich, 80539
Germany

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