This article develops a framework for environmental policy analysis based on an encompassing assessment of transaction costs. This approach emphasizes the ex ante costs of establishing environmental entitlements, and the ex post costs of administrating, monitoring, and enforcing them. The framework is used to organize a literature review which addresses policy design and instrument choice, as well as optimal environmental policy-making and benefit-cost analysis. The review also considers the empirical literature on transaction costs associated with environmental policy-making, and current practices to record some categories of transaction costs in regulatory impact assessments. The article concludes with a discussion of the implications for environmental policy analysis.
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15 April 2011
Research Article|
April 15 2011
Transaction Costs and Environmental Policy: An Assessment Framework and Literature Review Available to Purchase
Kerry Krutilla, with contributions from;
Kerry Krutilla, with contributions from
School of Public and Environmental Affairs,
Indiana University-Bloomington
, 1315 East Tenth St., Bloomington, IN 47405, USA
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Rachel Krause
Rachel Krause
School of Public and Environmental Affairs,
Indiana University-Bloomington
, 1315 East Tenth St., Bloomington, IN 47405, USA
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Online ISSN: 1932-1473
Print ISSN: 1932-1465
© 2011 K. Krutilla and R. Krause
2011
K. Krutilla and R. Krause
Licensed re-use rights only
International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics (2011) 4 (3-4): 261–354.
Citation
Krutilla K, Krause R (2011), "Transaction Costs and Environmental Policy: An Assessment Framework and Literature Review". International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics, Vol. 4 No. 3-4 pp. 261–354, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/101.00000035
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