Rüdiger Pethig
Center for Economic Studies
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Featured researches published by Rüdiger Pethig.
International Economic Review | 2011
Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
Policies of lowering carbon demand may aggravate rather than alleviate climate change (green paradox). In a two-period three-country general equilibrium model with finite endowment of fossil fuel one country enforces an emissions cap in the first or second period. When that cap is tightened the extent of carbon leakage depends on the interaction of various parameters and elasticities. Conditions for the green paradox are specified. All determinants of carbon leakage resulting from tightening the first-period cap work in opposite direction when the second-period cap is tightened. Tightening the second-period cap does not necessarily lead to the green paradox.
Journal of Economic Theory | 2009
Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
In an integrated dynamic general equilibrium model of the economy and the ecosystem humans and wildlife species compete for land and prey biomass. We introduce a competitive allocation mechanism in both submodels such that economic prices and ecosystem prices guide the allocation in the economy and in the ecosystem, respectively. We distinguish the scenarios of an open accessible habitat and a privately owned habitat. In both scenarios efficiency requires different corrective taxes/subsidies to internalize consumption services externalities. In the case of an open access habitat additional sources of inefficiency are the divergence of prices for biomass and land in both subsystems. Finally, we determine values of all components of the ecosystem in an efficient steady state with special emphasis on the role and the interplay of ecosystem and economic prices.
Environmental and Resource Economics | 2000
Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
In this paper we consider a competitive economy with flows of materials from extraction via recycling to landfilling which exhibits distortions due to pollution, external landfilling costs and inefficient product design. The allocative impact of tax-subsidy policies aiming at internalizing the distortions are analyzed when the pertinent tax-subsidy rates were successively raised from zero toward their efficiency restoring levels. Promoting recyclability by greening the product design stimulates recycling as expected. But it also increases primary material extraction and – possibly – the total waste flow, and it reduces the recycling ratio.
Strategic Behavior and the Environment | 2018
Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
We investigate the formation of global climate agreements (= stable grand climate coalitions) in a model, in which climate policy takes the form of carbon emission taxation and fossil fuel and consumption goods are traded on world markets. We expand the model of Eichner and Pethig (2014) by considering countries that are identical within each of two groups but differ across groups with respect to climate damage or fossil fuel demand. Our numerical analysis suggests that climate damage asymmetry tends to discourage cooperation in the grand coalition. The effects of fuel-demand asymmetry depend on fossil fuel abundance. If fuel is very abundant, the grand coalition fails to be stable independent of the degree of fuel demand asymmetry. If fuel is sufficiently scarce, low degrees of fuel demand asymmetry discourage cooperation whereas higher degrees of asymmetry stabilize the grand coalition.
Volkswirtschaftliche Diskussionsbeiträge | 2009
Rüdiger Pethig; Christian Wittlich
Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control | 2007
Thomas Christiaans; Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
International Economic Review | 1979
Rüdiger Pethig
Volkswirtschaftliche Diskussionsbeiträge | 2012
Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
Archive | 2017
Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig
Annual Conference 2016 (Augsburg): Demographic Change | 2017
Thomas Eichner; Rüdiger Pethig