(agri)Environmental contracts, dynamic inconsistencies and moral hazard

From the beginning of the world, the agricultural sector has always played an essential role into our society, and contracts have massively been used by policy-makers for the implementation of (agri)environmental policies, especially when such policies concern the use and development of privately...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Diakoulakis, Georgios N.
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:sueco
Inglés
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/8443/
Descripción
Sumario:From the beginning of the world, the agricultural sector has always played an essential role into our society, and contracts have massively been used by policy-makers for the implementation of (agri)environmental policies, especially when such policies concern the use and development of privately owned land, and information asymmetries between policy-makers and individuals exist. Even though the majority of (agri)environmental contracts are designed assuming individual’s constant time-preferences, recent evidence from many behavioural studies on individual’s intertemporal choices advocate declining time-preferences due to behavioural biases, which can be explained by hyperbolic discounting. Therefore, in this dissertation we present a theoretical analysis of the impact of an intertemporal time-inconsistent individual into a contract for the provision of an (agri)environmental target, under both perfect and imperfect information. Our key finding suggests that the more inconsistent time-preferences an individual has, the higher the impact of them into contract design is, unless a commitment mechanism (perfect information) or higher detection probability of cheaters (imperfect information) is feasible. We also found that the duration of the contract has a significant impact into it, only in cases where individuals know precisely (i.e. they have sophisticated beliefs) how inconsistent their time-preferences are.