This article explains how lobbying pressure intensifies tax-transfer inefficiencies in disaster prevention and relief. The social-welfare tradeoff in the government's joint provision of safety regulation and disaster relief is distorted by disinformational lobbying activity by disaster-exposed house
084021 (M54) The government, the market, and the problem of catastrophic loss : Priest G.L., Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 1996, Volume 12, nr. 2/3, pp. 219–237
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 89 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0167-6687
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✦ Synopsis
This article explains how lobbying pressure intensifies tax-transfer inefficiencies in disaster prevention and relief. The social-welfare tradeoff in the government's joint provision of safety regulation and disaster relief is distorted by disinformational lobbying activity by disaster-exposed households and by conflict between principles of horizontal and vertical equity. Horizontal equity presupposes that no group of taxpayers wants to transfer wealth ex ante to equally wealthy disaster-exposed parties. But vertical equity implies that, when disaster strikes, households that were previously able to hide the mitigability of their exposure to a ratable hazard can nevertheless extract sizable transfers from other taxpayers ex post.
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