Working Paper

Transboundary Externalities and Reciprocal Taxes: A Differential Game Approach

Charles F. Mason
CESifo, Munich, 2017

CESifo Working Paper No. 6561

I investigate the interaction between a country that imports a commodity whose production contributes to a stock pollution, such as electricity, from a country that produces that commodity. If the transboundary externality is priced improperly, the application of a feed-in tariff or border tax adjustment can provide an indirect policy instrument. But the imposition of such a tariff or tax creates an incentive for the producing country to deploy some sort of pollution controlling instrument. This, in turn, creates a strategic interaction between the two countries. Because the externality is inked to a stock pollutant, this strategic interaction will play out over time, which induces a dynamic game. In this modeling context, I describe the nature of the strategic interaction, and characterize the Markov-perfect equilibrium.

CESifo Category
Energy and Climate Economics
Resources and Environment
Keywords: transboundary pollution, differential game, tariff, tax
JEL Classification: C730, Q540, Q580