Green technology upgrading choice in a competitive setting: the effect of environmental tax
Green technology upgrading choice in a competitive setting: the effect of environmental tax
This research considers a supply chain consisting of a regulator and two symmetric firms where the regulator influences the market by imposing a tax on firms’ environmental pollutant emissions. A price competition model is proposed to examine the equilibrium solutions that the two firms can reach in their technology upgrading process, and the effect of the environmental tax is evaluated. The two firms’ Nash equilibrium solutions regarding their technology improvement decision show that there is no asymmetric equilibrium. The decision to upgrade or not upgrade may arise in equilibrium, depending on the technology’s fixed cost. Besides, a prisoner’s dilemma may arise when the two firms do not upgrade their technology, and multiple equilibria may arise when the fixed cost incurred is at a medium level. Technology improvement decision is the dominant strategy when either prisoner’s dilemma arises or multiple equilibria arise for the two firms regardless of whether the environmental tax is exogenous given or not. In addition, firms’ reactions to environmental tax may be non-monotone. However, the role of the tax on firms’ improvement decisions is limited when the regulator further increases the tax. Finally, the optimal tax level for the regulator that can maximise welfare is obtained.
Zhou, Qin
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Gao, Ruobin
0ccb66e0-4b50-442c-8619-620469b4974b
Yuen, Kum Fai
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Zhou, Qin
22cc3c1b-50f4-41e0-9c3e-8cdf183a022e
Gao, Ruobin
0ccb66e0-4b50-442c-8619-620469b4974b
Yuen, Kum Fai
5acba8bd-2837-4913-8ec8-5b9b98cb04b9
Zhou, Qin, Gao, Ruobin and Yuen, Kum Fai
(2022)
Green technology upgrading choice in a competitive setting: the effect of environmental tax.
International Journal of Logistics Research and Applications.
(doi:10.1080/13675567.2022.2154752).
Abstract
This research considers a supply chain consisting of a regulator and two symmetric firms where the regulator influences the market by imposing a tax on firms’ environmental pollutant emissions. A price competition model is proposed to examine the equilibrium solutions that the two firms can reach in their technology upgrading process, and the effect of the environmental tax is evaluated. The two firms’ Nash equilibrium solutions regarding their technology improvement decision show that there is no asymmetric equilibrium. The decision to upgrade or not upgrade may arise in equilibrium, depending on the technology’s fixed cost. Besides, a prisoner’s dilemma may arise when the two firms do not upgrade their technology, and multiple equilibria may arise when the fixed cost incurred is at a medium level. Technology improvement decision is the dominant strategy when either prisoner’s dilemma arises or multiple equilibria arise for the two firms regardless of whether the environmental tax is exogenous given or not. In addition, firms’ reactions to environmental tax may be non-monotone. However, the role of the tax on firms’ improvement decisions is limited when the regulator further increases the tax. Finally, the optimal tax level for the regulator that can maximise welfare is obtained.
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Accepted/In Press date: 30 November 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 December 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473936
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473936
ISSN: 1367-5567
PURE UUID: 28b5466c-3fe6-41fa-8190-6559b7fb3294
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Date deposited: 06 Feb 2023 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:37
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Author:
Qin Zhou
Author:
Ruobin Gao
Author:
Kum Fai Yuen
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