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Active HORIZON European Commission

Econometric Models to Evaluate Environmental and Spatial Effects of Long-Lasting Policies

€1.41M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Fondation Jean Jacques Laffont,Toulouse Sciences Economiques
Country France
Start Date Sep 01, 2023
End Date Aug 31, 2028
Duration 1,826 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Coordinator; Third Party
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101077168
Grant Description

Policies often target one market: road taxes target commuting, agricultural subsidies target farming, and car taxes target the automobile market.

Economists developed a rich toolbox to evaluate the effects of policy in the targeted market in a partial equilibrium analysis. However, policies are often long-lasting and massive in scale, affecting where economic activity occurs.

The spatial distribution of activity matters in agriculture and transport because of the environmental externalities of land use, congestion, and pollution.

This proposal presents an econometric methodology to study the interaction between policy and the spatial distribution of economic activity.

The proposal presents a collection of large-scale spatial data that combine individual choices with aggregate outcomes and proposes a methodology that connects partial equilibrium evaluation of policy with spatial general equilibrium models.

The first project illustrates how we can use a combination of data on individual travel choices and aggregate outcomes on traffic equilibria to estimate a structural econometric bottleneck model of congestion.

The second project presents a methodology to investigate how the Common Agricultural Policy and Natura 2000 affect land use in the European Union. The Common Agricultural Policy has provided income support to almost 10 million European farmers since 1962. Natura 2000 protects 17% of Europe's terrestrial landmass.

Subsidies in one region affect farmers in another through the open EU agricultural market. The third project evaluates policy that affects transport mode costs, such as company car taxation. Company cars receive an implicit subsidy of 50% and represent half of the new vehicle sales in several EU countries.

Such subsidy to commuting by private vehicles impacts the spatial distribution of workers and firms.

The location choices and resulting commuting patterns drive the policy's carbon, congestion, and pollution externality effects.

All Grantees

Fondation Jean Jacques Laffont,Toulouse Sciences Economiques; Ecole D'Economie Et de Sciences Sociales Quantitatives de Toulouse - Tse

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