The Market Responses to the Government Regulation of Chlorinated Solvents: A Policy Analysis
Abstract
Under the Toxic Substances Control Act, the Environmental Protection Agency must oversee a wide range of chemicals that may harm humans or the environment. If each potentially toxic chemical were used completely independently of other potentially toxic chemicals, regulatory analysis of any chemical could ignore the effects of regulation upon other chemicals. If, as is the case, users of a chemical can substitute other chemicals, regulatory analysis must account for the second-order effects of regulation on the other chemicals. This study argues that implicit risk tradeoffs among chemicals occur repeatedly as the response of economic markets to government regulation. It recommends, therefore, that such tradeoffs be formally incorporated into the analysis of regulatory alternatives. Using publicly available historical data on chemical markets, the study builds a methodology can be used to analyze the effects of regulatory alternatives before the Environmental Protection Agency.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Oct 01, 1988
- Accession Number
- ADA228108
Entities
People
- Thomas W. Chestnutt
Organizations
- RAND Corporation