经济
煤
市场支配力
反事实思维
碳排放税
自然资源经济学
外部性
失真(音乐)
损害赔偿
上游(联网)
温室气体
微观经济学
工程类
废物管理
生态学
放大器
哲学
电信
认识论
CMOS芯片
电子工程
生物
政治学
法学
垄断
标识
DOI:10.1093/restud/rdad090
摘要
Abstract Economists have widely endorsed pricing CO2 emissions to internalize climate change-related externalities. Doing so would significantly affect coal, the most carbon-intensive energy source. However, U.S. coal markets exhibit an additional distortion: the railroads that transport coal to power plants can exert market power. This article estimates how coal-by-rail markups respond to changes in coal demand. I identify markups in a major intermediate goods market using both reduced-form and structural methods. I find that rail carriers reduce coal markups when downstream power plant demand changes due to a drop in the price of natural gas (a competing fuel). My results imply that decreases in coal markups have increased recent U.S. climate damages by $11.9 billion, compared to a counterfactual where markups did not change. Incomplete pass-through would likely erode the environmental benefits of an incremental carbon tax, shifting the tax burden towards upstream railroads. Still, a non-trivial tax would likely increase welfare.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI