Developing Country Second-Mover Advantage in Competition over Environmental Standards and Taxes
Working Paper No.
10-W12
Valeska Groenert, Myrna Wooders and Ben Zissimos
ABSTRACT [article]
Abstract: We show that, in competition between a developed country and a developing
country over environmental standards and taxes, the developing country may have a 'second-
mover advantage.' In our model, firms do not unanimously prefer lower environmental-
standard levels. We introduce this feature to an otherwise familiar model of fiscal competi-
tion. Four distinct outcomes can be characterized by varying the marginal cost to firms of
an environmental externality: (1) the outcome may be efficient; (2) the developing country
may be a 'pollution haven;' a place to escape excessively high environmental standards in
the developed country; (3) the developing country may 'undercut' the developed country
and attract all firms; (4) the developed country may be a pollution haven.
Keywords and Phrases: Environmental standards, fiscal competition, second mover advantage, tax
competition.
JEL Classification Numbers: H2; H3; Q2