Time Inconsistent Environmental Policy and Optimal Delegation

Richard Mash, Dieter Helm, Cameron Hepburn

Abstract

Time consistency problems can arise when environmental taxes are employed to encourage firms to take irreversible abatement decisions.  Setting a high carbon tax, for instance, would induce firms to invest in low-carbon technology, yet once investment has occurred the government can then reduce the carbon tax to better achieve other objectives; lower energy prices, redistribution, and electoral success.  The resulting time inconsistency discourages firms from investing in the first place.  We propose an institutional solution to this problem, adapted from the monetary policy literature; the commitment outcome can be achieved through delegation to an `environmental policymaker`, akin to a conservative central banker.

Keywords: Time Inconsistency, Environmental Taxation, Monetary Policy, Delegation

Date: October 2003 | Reference number(s): 175

Series: Department of Economics Discussion Paper Series

JEL Classifications: E52, E61, Q43, Q48

Last edited: 04 01 2008