Welfare maximization, pricing, and allocation with a product performance or environmental quality standard: Illustration for the gasoline and additives market

Programming models approximate market prices and quantities when regulations constrain firm choices, because market outcomes result when welfare is appropriately defined and includes performance and environmental constraints. This study discusses market operation in quality-constrained sectors, like...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of production economics Vol. 101; no. 2; pp. 230 - 245
Main Authors Gallagher, Paul W., Shapouri, Hosein, Price, Jeffrey
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amsterdam Elsevier B.V 01.06.2006
Elsevier
Elsevier Sequoia S.A
SeriesInternational Journal of Production Economics
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Summary:Programming models approximate market prices and quantities when regulations constrain firm choices, because market outcomes result when welfare is appropriately defined and includes performance and environmental constraints. This study discusses market operation in quality-constrained sectors, like gasoline and additives; processors expand output until marginal processing cost equals the processing margin between product revenues and raw material costs; retailers who buy gasoline and additives from processors and sell blended retail gasoline price sales at a marginal cost that includes the blended input value plus adjustments for values of constrained attributes; and market supplies and demands of measurable attributes like octane are balanced. This method can enhance predictions about the effects of new policies that regulate product quality. Analysis can now include price and output adjustment in factor and product markets, and the competitiveness of new processes and products.
ISSN:0925-5273
1873-7579
DOI:10.1016/j.ijpe.2004.11.016