The Use of Regression Statistics to Analyze Imperfect Pricing Policies
Author(s)
Jacobsen, Mark R; Knittel, Christopher R; Sallee, James M; van Benthem, Arthur A
DownloadPublished version (1.168Mb)
Publisher Policy
Publisher Policy
Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use.
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
© 2020 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. Corrective taxes can solve many market failures, but actual policies frequently deviate from the theoretical ideal because of administrative or political constraints. We present a method to quantify the efficiency costs of constraints on externality-correcting policies or, more generally, the costs of imperfect pricing, using simple regression statistics. Under certain conditions, the R2 and the sum of squared residuals from a regression of true externalities on policy variables measure relative welfare gains frompolicies.We illustrate via four empirical applications: Random mismeasurement of externalities, imperfect electricity pricing, heterogeneity in the longevity of energy-consuming durable goods, and imperfect spatial policy differentiation.
Date issued
2020Department
Sloan School of ManagementJournal
The Journal of Political Economy
Publisher
University of Chicago Press