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Vintage-Specific Driving Restrictions

    1. [1] Stanford University

      Stanford University

      Estados Unidos

    2. [2] Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

      Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

      Santiago, Chile

  • Localización: Review of economic studies, ISSN 0034-6527, Vol. 87, Nº 4, 2020, págs. 1646-1682
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Local air pollution has led authorities in many cities around the world to impose limits on car use by means of driving restrictions or license-plate bans. By placing uniform restrictions on all cars, many of these programs have created incentives for drivers to buy additional, more polluting cars. We study vintage-specific restrictions, which place heavy limits on older, polluting vehicles and no limits on newer, cleaner ones. We use a novel model of the car market and results from Santiago’s 1992 program, the earliest program to use vintage-specific restrictions, to show that such restrictions should be designed to work exclusively through the extensive margin (type of car driven), never through the intensive margin (number of miles driven). If so, vintage restrictions can yield important welfare gains by moving the fleet composition toward cleaner cars, comparing well to alternative instruments such as scrappage subsidies and pollution-based registration fees.


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