. . "Zonder onderwerpscode: economie." . . "National Bureau of Economic Research" . . "Local solutions to global problems policy choice and regulatory jurisdiction"@en . . . . "Local Solutions to Global Problems : Policy Choice and Regulatory Jurisdiction" . . . "Local solutions to global problems: policy choice and regulatory jurisdiction" . . . . . . . . "Local Solutions to Global Problems Policy Choice and Regulatory Jurisdiction"@en . "Local Solutions to Global Problems Policy Choice and Regulatory Jurisdiction" . . . . . "Local solutions to global problems : policy choice and regulatory jurisdiction" . "Local solutions to global problems : policy choice and regulatory jurisdiction"@en . . . . "This paper considers the efficiency of various types of environmental regulations when they are applied locally to pollutants whose damages extend outside the jurisdiction of the local regulator. We draw on examples from state- and city-level efforts to address climate change by enacting policies to reduce greenhouse gases. While previous work has noted the possibility for leakage, whereby the polluting sources move outside the jurisdiction of the regulation in order to escape it, we note an additional problem when policies are targeted downstream at consumers of goods whose production creates pollution. Specifically, we show how consumer-based policies can be circumvented by a simple reshuffling of who is buying from whom. We argue that the leakage and reshuffling problems are most pronounced with more flexible or market-based regulations. We conclude that localities may have the most effect on global pollutants when they enact efficiency standards or targeted subsidies." . "This paper considers the efficiency of various types of environmental regulations when they are applied locally to pollutants whose damages extend outside the jurisdiction of the local regulator. We draw on examples from state- and city-level efforts to address climate change by enacting policies to reduce greenhouse gases. While previous work has noted the possibility for leakage, whereby the polluting sources move outside the jurisdiction of the regulation in order to escape it, we note an additional problem when policies are targeted downstream at consumers of goods whose production creates pollution. Specifically, we show how consumer-based policies can be circumvented by a simple reshuffling of who is buying from whom. We argue that the leakage and reshuffling problems are most pronounced with more flexible or market-based regulations. We conclude that localities may have the most effect on global pollutants when they enact efficiency standards or targeted subsidies."@en . . . . .