Publication:
A Reason for Quantity Regulation

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2001

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American Economic Association
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Glaeser, Edward L, and Andrei Shleifer. 2001. “A Reason for Quantity Regulation.” American Economic Review 91 (2) (May): 431–435. doi:10.1257/aer.91.2.431.

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Abstract

Contrary to the standard economic advice, many regulations of financial intermediaries, as well as other regulations such as blue laws, fishing rules, zoning restrictions, or pollution controls, take the form of quantity controls rather than taxes. We argue that costs of enforcement are crucial to understanding these choices. When violations of quantity regulations are cheaper to discover than failures to pay taxes, the former can emerge as the optimal instrument for the government, even when it is less attractive in the absence of enforcement costs. This analysis is especially relevant to situations where private enforcement of regulations is crucial.

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