2 juillet 2024
Philippe Bontems et al., « Environmental Tax Competition and Welfare: The Good News about Lobbies », HALSHS : archive ouverte en Sciences de l’Homme et de la Société, ID : 10670/1.147006...
This paper focuses on the welfare effects of domestic and international lobbying in the context of two countries linked by both trade and pollution. We consider a reciprocal-markets model where, in each country, a domestic firm produces a polluting good, that can result in a cross-national environmental externality, and competes in quantities in each market with a foreign firm. Each government independently sets a pollution tax under political pressure from green and industrial lobbies à la Grossman and Helpman (1994). Our results mainly show that political pressure from domestic and/or international lobbies can help mitigate taxcompetition between the two countries, resulting in an improvement in social welfare. In fact, lobbying acts much like a strategic delegation device by changing the social welfare weights in the objective function of each government. The (potential) welfare-improving effect of political pressure depends on the relative strengths of the lobbies and on the nature of the strategic interactions in taxes.