Pesticide taxation and multi-objective policy-making: farm modelling to evaluate profit/environment trade-offs

Citation
K. Falconer et I. Hodge, Pesticide taxation and multi-objective policy-making: farm modelling to evaluate profit/environment trade-offs, ECOL ECON, 36(2), 2001, pp. 263-279
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,Economics
Journal title
ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
ISSN journal
09218009 → ACNP
Volume
36
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
263 - 279
Database
ISI
SICI code
0921-8009(200102)36:2<263:PTAMPF>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Many countries in Western Europe have introduced voluntary programmes to en courage farmers to adopt environmentally more benign practices such as inte grated pest management, but more policy action appears to be needed to meet the environmental quality levels now demanded. Input taxes could assist in meeting policy objectives. The issue considered here is the identification of the most appropriate specification of a tax instrument to reduce the en vironmental problems of agricultural pesticide usage. This paper takes a fa rm systems approach to evaluation. A case-study illustration is given for a specialist arable farm in the UK, combining an economic model of land use and production with a set of environmental indicators for pesticides. Linki ng these two components allows the identification of the potential trade-of fs between achieving reductions in the environmental burden to a number of ecological dimensions and farm income. Different pesticide tax specificatio ns vary in both the magnitude and the direction of their impacts. The resul ts of the model indicate that either compromises will have to be made in en vironmental policy, or additional instruments will be required to counter-a ct the negative side-effects of some instruments. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.