Empirical calibration of climate policy using corporate solvency: a case study of the UK's carbon price support
In: Climate policy, Band 18, Heft 6, S. 766-780
ISSN: 1752-7457
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In: Climate policy, Band 18, Heft 6, S. 766-780
ISSN: 1752-7457
In: Economica, Band 87, Heft 348, S. 1078-1104
ISSN: 1468-0335
Britain tightly restricts the supply of office space, creating substantial economic rents, but its development restrictions are politically administered and therefore gameable, inducing rent‐seeking activity. We find that 'trophy architects' (TAs)—prior winners of a lifetime achievement award—obtain more space on a given site apparently by signalling architectural merit. Analysis of 2039 office buildings shows that TAs build 14 stories taller, thereby increasing a representative site value by 152% and capturing potential economic rents of £148m. However, we argue that this apparent premium is merely compensation for the extra costs, risks and delays of using a TA to game the planning system; it is therefore an indirect measure of the deadweight costs of this form of rent‐seeking.
In: Economica, Band 87, Heft 348, S. 1078-1104
SSRN
In: Sustainable Finance Programme – Working Paper – August 2017
SSRN
Working paper