Background: Marinus van Reymerswale, Wikimedia, 1542
The Basic Idea
A charge based on the amount of something - a substance, an action, etc.
Charge increases with the amount of the action
The Pigovian Tax
Arthur Cecil (A.C.) Pigou - Cambridge economist, early 20th century
1920: The Economics of Welfare, first major treatment of externalities
Proposes a tax that would be exactly equal to the social cost of an externality as means of internalization
how it Works:
Wikimedia, 2008
So what does the government need to be able to do to have a Pigovian tax? What would be the consequences of error?
For a Pigovian tax to work, the Scale of the harm must be the same as the scale of the tax.
Why is that?
Examples of Pigovian Taxes
US Gasoline Tax
1919: Oregon passes first US gasoline tax
1932: First federal gasoline tax
Alm, et al., Economic Inquiry, 2009: costs of tax tend to be passed on to consumers
Liddle and Lung, USAEE Working Paper, 2013: governments tend to use gas taxes to raise revenues, not for environmental objectives
Davis and Kilian, Journal of Applied Economics, 2011: 10-cent increase in tax may decrease CO2 emissions from US vehicles by 1.5%
Background: Guyon, Wikimedia, 2011
Forest Tax Law
Interest in taxes for forest conservation in early 1900s
Hibbard, et al., Journal of Forestry, 2003: 16 out of 66 state forest tax law programs in the US required forest management plans
Illinois Forest Development Act allows forestlands in counties with a population less than 3 million people with a forest management plan can be taxed at 1/6 of its value as cropland
Background: USDA, Wikimedia, 1938
Based on your reading and these examples, what advantages of Pigovian taxes might there be?
ADvantages:
Allow for different costs of pollution reduction (abatement)
Continued innovation incentives
Less chance for regulatory capture
Revenues!
Simplicity
What about Disadvantages?
Disadvantages
Scalar mismatch (geographically varying damages)
Decentralized firm decisions
"Dumping" and illegal avoidance
Regressive tax: heavier proportional burden on poorer people