G-2012-71
A Differential Game of International Pollution Control with Evolving Environmental Costs
and BibTeX reference
We consider a two-player differential game of international emissions to represent the interactions between two groups of countries, namely, developed and developing countries. We adopt a broader-than-usual definition of environmental cost for developing countries to account for their evolving involvement in tackling environmental externalities. Cooperative and non-cooperative solutions are characterized and contrasted. We obtain that it may not be the best course of action to push developing countries to reduce their emissions in the short term, and that cooperation may not create enough dividend, also in the short term, to be implementable.
Published November 2012 , 24 pages
Research Axis
Research application
Publication
Dec 2013
A differential game of international pollution control with evolving environmental costs
and
Environment and Development Economics, 18(6), 680–700, 2013
BibTeX reference