cover image: Policy with Stochastic Hysteresis

20.500.12592/sjmd3x

Policy with Stochastic Hysteresis

22 Apr 2021

The paper develops a general methodology for analyzing policies with path-dependency (hysteresis) in stochastic models with forward looking optimizing agents. Our main application is a macro-climate model with a path-dependent climate externality. We derive in closed form the dynamics of the optimal Pigouvian tax, that is, its drift and diffusion coefficients. The dynamics of the present marginal damages is given by the recently developed functional Itô formula. The dynamics of the conditional expectation process of the future marginal damages is given by a new total derivative formula that we prove. The total derivative formula represents the evolution of the conditional expectation process as a sum of the expected dynamics of hysteresis with respect to time, a form of a time derivative, and the expected dynamics of hysteresis with the shocks to the trajectory of the stochastic process, a form of a stochastic derivative. We then generalize the results. First, we propose a general class of hysteresis functionals that permits significant tractability. Second, we characterize in closed form the dynamics of the stochastic hysteresis elasticity that represents the change in the whole optimal policy process with an introduction of small hysteresis effects. Third, we determine the optimal policy process.
energy taxation macroeconomics public economics economic fluctuations and growth environment and energy economics environmental and resource economics

Authors

Georgii Riabov, Aleh Tsyvinski

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
We thank Fernando Alvarez, Lint Barrage, Job Boerma, Jaroslav Borovička, Eduardo Faingold, Felix Kubler, Francesco Lippi, Ernest Liu, Erzo Luttmer, Giuseppe Moscarini, Alessandro Pavan, Florian Scheuer, Simon Scheidegger, Michael Sockin, Stefanie Stantcheva, Kjetil Storesletten, Philip Strack, Ted Temzelides, Pierre Yared, and Nicolas Werquin. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w28712
Published in
United States of America

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