Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics

This dissertation analyses the impact of political and macroeconomic uncertainties on environmental outcomes and design of policy instruments.  The first essay examines how the rate of agricultural land expansion in tropical countries depends on the nature and persistence of new political regimes.  ...

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Main Author: Kuusela, Olli-Pekka
Other Authors: Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/50508
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-505082020-09-29T05:31:39Z Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics Kuusela, Olli-Pekka Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation Amacher, Gregory S. Moeltner, Klaus Tsang, Kwok Ping Sullivan, Bradley J. Alavalapati, Janaki Tropical deforestation Timber concessions Performance bonds Permit markets Macroeconomic uncertainty This dissertation analyses the impact of political and macroeconomic uncertainties on environmental outcomes and design of policy instruments.  The first essay examines how the rate of agricultural land expansion in tropical countries depends on the nature and persistence of new political regimes.  We use a novel panel data method that extends previous studies.  We find that both new autocratic and democratic regimes have accelerated the expansion of agricultural land, thus yielding support to some of the findings in the earlier literature.  Interesting differences emerge between regions, with the impact being most pronounced in Latin America.  The analysis is developed more formally using a simple competitive land use model with political regime dependent confiscation risk and agricultural subsidy policy.  The second essay evaluates the effectiveness of performance bonding for tropical forest concession management in achieving first and second best outcomes concerning reduced impact logging (RIL) standards.  As a novel contribution, this essay introduces a simple model of two-stage concession design, and focus on the impact of three complications: harvester participation constraints, government repayment risk, and imperfect enforcement.  We find several new and interesting results, in particular, imperfect enforcement and bond risk may deter implementation of bonding schemes as either the bond payment has to be set higher or the penalty mapping has to become more punitive.  Policy implications, including potential for mechanisms such as REDD+ in improving the bonding outcomes, and the degree of financial support required to guarantee full implementation of RIL, are also examined.  The third essay focuses on the relative performance of fixed versus intensity allowances in the presence of both productivity and energy price uncertainties.  Both allowance instruments achieve the same steady-state emissions reduction target of 20%, which is similar to the current policy proposals, and the regulator then chooses the allowance policy that has the lowest expected abatement cost.  We use a standard real business cycle (RBC) model to solve for the expected abatement cost under both policies.  Unlike previous studies, our results show that under a reasonable model calibration, fixed allowances outperform intensity allowances with as much as 30% cost difference. Ph. D. 2014-09-17T06:00:09Z 2014-09-17T06:00:09Z 2013-03-25 Dissertation vt_gsexam:356 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/50508 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Tropical deforestation
Timber concessions
Performance bonds
Permit markets
Macroeconomic uncertainty
spellingShingle Tropical deforestation
Timber concessions
Performance bonds
Permit markets
Macroeconomic uncertainty
Kuusela, Olli-Pekka
Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics
description This dissertation analyses the impact of political and macroeconomic uncertainties on environmental outcomes and design of policy instruments.  The first essay examines how the rate of agricultural land expansion in tropical countries depends on the nature and persistence of new political regimes.  We use a novel panel data method that extends previous studies.  We find that both new autocratic and democratic regimes have accelerated the expansion of agricultural land, thus yielding support to some of the findings in the earlier literature.  Interesting differences emerge between regions, with the impact being most pronounced in Latin America.  The analysis is developed more formally using a simple competitive land use model with political regime dependent confiscation risk and agricultural subsidy policy.  The second essay evaluates the effectiveness of performance bonding for tropical forest concession management in achieving first and second best outcomes concerning reduced impact logging (RIL) standards.  As a novel contribution, this essay introduces a simple model of two-stage concession design, and focus on the impact of three complications: harvester participation constraints, government repayment risk, and imperfect enforcement.  We find several new and interesting results, in particular, imperfect enforcement and bond risk may deter implementation of bonding schemes as either the bond payment has to be set higher or the penalty mapping has to become more punitive.  Policy implications, including potential for mechanisms such as REDD+ in improving the bonding outcomes, and the degree of financial support required to guarantee full implementation of RIL, are also examined.  The third essay focuses on the relative performance of fixed versus intensity allowances in the presence of both productivity and energy price uncertainties.  Both allowance instruments achieve the same steady-state emissions reduction target of 20%, which is similar to the current policy proposals, and the regulator then chooses the allowance policy that has the lowest expected abatement cost.  We use a standard real business cycle (RBC) model to solve for the expected abatement cost under both policies.  Unlike previous studies, our results show that under a reasonable model calibration, fixed allowances outperform intensity allowances with as much as 30% cost difference. === Ph. D.
author2 Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
author_facet Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation
Kuusela, Olli-Pekka
author Kuusela, Olli-Pekka
author_sort Kuusela, Olli-Pekka
title Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics
title_short Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics
title_full Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics
title_fullStr Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics
title_full_unstemmed Three Essays in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics
title_sort three essays in natural resource and environmental economics
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/50508
work_keys_str_mv AT kuuselaollipekka threeessaysinnaturalresourceandenvironmentaleconomics
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