Environmental Regulation as Export Promotion: Product Standards for Dirty Intermediate Goods
Abstract
We employ a stylized model of trade in dirty intermediate goods to examine the impacts of product standards on trade volumes and pollution levels. Our focus is on the case with economies of scale in intermediate good production. In this setting, changes in one country's demand for dirty inputs can feed back to affect the quality of intermediate goods offered for sale in international markets. We provide conditions under which tightening product standards in one country can raise both the profits of and exports from that country's final good producers. Greening product standards can have perverse environmental impacts: tightening rules governing emissions arising from the use of dirty inputs may raise rather than reduce local pollution.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Advances Article
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1215
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1204
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1318
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1288
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1331
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1330
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1344
- 10.2202/1538-0637.1408
- Contributions Article
- Pollution Havens and the Regulation of Multinationals with Asymmetric Information
- Does Trade Promote Environmental Coordination?: Pollution in International Rivers
- Environmental Policy, Population Dynamics and Agglomeration
- Cross-Country Policy Harmonization with Rent-Seeking
- Environmental Regulation and International Trade: Empirical Results for Germany, the Netherlands and the US, 1977-1992
- Pollution Abatement Expenditure by U.S. Manufacturing Plants: Do Community Characteristics Matter?
- Environmental Regulation as Export Promotion: Product Standards for Dirty Intermediate Goods
- Pollution Havens and Foreign Direct Investment: Dirty Secret or Popular Myth?