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Working Paper: The Two-Part Instrument in a Second-Best World

Paper Number: 2003-04

Document Date: 08/2003

Author(s): Don Fullerton and Ann Wolverton

Subject Area(s): Pollution Control Options and Economic Incentives; Environmental Policy; Modeling

Keywords: two-part instrument; second-best theory; optimal tax; distortionary taxation; market-based instruments; environmental externalities

Abstract: The standard theory that the first-best tax on pollution is equal to marginal environmental damages has been extended in two directions. First, many polluting activities are difficult to tax because they are not market transactions, and so recent papers have shown that the same effects can be achieved by use of a two-part instrument– a tax on one market transaction such as output or income and a subsidy to a different market transaction that is a clean alternative to pollution. It is a generalization of a deposit-refund system. Second, a different literature concerns the second-best optimal pollution tax in the presence of other tax distortions. Here, we combine the two extensions by looking at the second-best two-part instrument (2PI). When government needs revenue, is the deposit larger and the rebate smaller? We find explicit solutions for each tax and subsidy in a general equilibrium model with other tax distortions, and we compare these to the rates in a first-best model. The tax-subsidy combination is explained in terms of a tax effect, an environmental effect, and a revenue effect. The model allows for flexible interpretation, to show various applications of the 2PI. We also discuss important caveats, cases where the 2PI may not be appropriate.

Published: Fullerton, Don and Ann Wolverton. 2005. "An Analysis of the Two-Part Instrument in the Second-Best," Journal of Public Economics 89(9-10): 1961-1975.

This paper is part of the Environmental Economics Working Paper Series.

  • The Two-Part Instrument in a Second-Best World (pdf) (722.92 KB, 08/2003)

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