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The Economics of Attribute-Based Regulation: Theory and Evidence from Fuel Economy Standards

Koichiro Ito1; James M. Sallee2

1 University of Chicago and NBER · 2 University of California, Berkeley and NBER

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2018 open access

This paper analyzes "attribute-based regulations," in which regulatory compliance depends upon some secondary attribute that is not the intended target of the regulation. For example, in many countries, fuel-economy standards mandate that vehicles have a certain fuel economy, but heavier or larger vehicles are allowed to meet a lower standard. Such policies create perverse incentives to distort the attribute upon which compliance depends. We develop a theoretical framework to predict how actors will respond to attribute-based regulations and to characterize the welfare implications of these responses. To test our theoretical predictions, we exploit quasi-experimental variation in Japanese fuel economy regulations, under which fuel-economy targets are downward-sloping step functions of vehicle weight. Our bunching analysis reveals large distortions to vehicle weight induced by the policy. We then leverage panel data on vehicle redesigns to empirically investigate the welfare implications of attribute-basing, including both potential benefits and likely costs.

DOI
10.1162/rest_a_00704
Volume
100 (2)
Pages
319-336
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
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