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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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- Climate change (4)
- Emissions trading (4)
- Cap and trade (3)
- Economic development (2)
- Economic incentives (2)
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- Global warming (2)
- Instrument choice (2)
- Connective Corridor (1)
- Connective corridor ; Syracuse City (1)
- Disability insurance (1)
- Downstream (1)
- Employer-sponsored insurance benefits (1)
- End-of-the-pipe (1)
- Environment (1)
- Environmental (1)
- Fossil fuels (1)
- Health care reform (1)
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- Inputs (1)
- Kyoto Protocol (1)
- Kyoto protocol (1)
- Labor supply (1)
- Market mechanisms (1)
- Market-based mechanisms (1)
- Outputs (1)
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- Pollution prevention (1)
- Regulation (1)
- Regulatory design (1)
- Regulatory instruments (1)
Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Effective Target Of The Social Security Disability Benefits Reform Act Of 1984, Perry Douglas Singleton
The Effective Target Of The Social Security Disability Benefits Reform Act Of 1984, Perry Douglas Singleton
Center for Policy Research
A substantial portion of the rise in Social Security Disability Insurance rolls since 1984 has been attributed to the Social Security Disability Benefits Reform Act. Using data from the National Health Insurance Survey, I examine whom the act effectively targeted. The analysis shows that new enrollees were demonstrably taller than previous enrollees, suggesting that the act expanded eligibility to individuals in better health and socioeconomic circumstances. However, the estimated effect of increased SSDI eligibility on employment is low, suggesting that the act targeted males who would have otherwise been unemployed.
Connective Corridor Inventories, Syracuse University. Maxwell School. Community Benchmarks Program
Connective Corridor Inventories, Syracuse University. Maxwell School. Community Benchmarks Program
Community Benchmarks Program
No abstract provided.
The Connective Corridor: Bridging The University With The Community, Syracuse University. Maxwell School. Community Benchmarks Program
The Connective Corridor: Bridging The University With The Community, Syracuse University. Maxwell School. Community Benchmarks Program
Community Benchmarks Program
The purpose of this report is to provide baseline data of properties located along the Connective Corridor. The data will serve as a tool to measure development of the Connective Corridor over time. Information in this report is presented in four sections. 1) Aggregated parcels 2) Downtown 3) University area, and 4) Arts and Lodging The downtown is defined by the geographic area extending from East Adams to Route 690 (south to north) and West Street to I-81 (east to west). The university parcels are confined within Harrison (south to north) and Irving streets to Comstock Avenue (east to west). …
The Missing Instrument: Dirty Input Limits, David M. Driesen, Amy Sinden
The Missing Instrument: Dirty Input Limits, David M. Driesen, Amy Sinden
College of Law - Faculty Scholarship
This article evaluates an environmental protection instrument that the literature has hitherto largely overlooked, Dirty Input Limits (DILs), quantitative limits on the inputs that cause pollution. DILs provide an alternative to cumbersome output-based emissions trading and performance standards. DILs have played a role in some of the world's most prominent environmental success stories. They have also begun to influence climate change policy, because of the impossibility of imposing an output-based cap on transport emissions. We evaluate DILs' administrative advantages, efficiency, dynamic properties, and capacity to better integrate environmental protection efforts. DILs, we show, not only have significant advantages that make …
Capping Carbon, David M. Driesen
Capping Carbon, David M. Driesen
College of Law - Faculty Scholarship
This article addresses the problem of how to set caps for a cap-and-trade program, a key problem in pending legislation addressing global climate disruption. Previous scholarship on emissions trading programs focuses overwhelmingly on trading’s advantages and sometimes wrongly portrays environmental improvement as an automatic byproduct of adopting a cap-and-trade approach. A trading program’s success, however, depends critically upon timely and effective cap setting.
This article shows that often regulators have employed a best available technology (BAT) approach to cap setting for trading programs, i.e., setting the cap at a level that regulated polluters can achieve with government-identified technology. This descriptive …
Neoliberal Instrument Choice, David M. Driesen
Neoliberal Instrument Choice, David M. Driesen
College of Law - Faculty Scholarship
This book chapter reviews the influence on economic thought about instrument choice and its influence upon United States climate change policy. It shows that the theory of instrument choice made a positive contribution to the United States policy arsenal by emphasizing the cost effectiveness advantages of emissions trading. But because of an ideological climate uncritically supportive of free markets prevailed during the period of U.S. failure to address climate change, the United States favored overly broad trading programs, both in terms of geography and scope. This posture had a large influence on the Kyoto Protocol, leading the world to adopt …
Toward Sustainable Technology, David M. Driesen
Toward Sustainable Technology, David M. Driesen
College of Law - Faculty Scholarship
This paper offers suggestions for climate change policies advancing technological changes necessary for sustainable development. It first explains why relentless pursuit of cost effectiveness through broad environmental benefit trading does not maximize long term technological advancement and explores options for narrowing trading's design. It then explores two alternatives to Kyoto style trading to show how a goal of creating a positive long term economic dynamic
Universal Health Insurance Coverage: Progress And Issues., Jonathan Gruber
Universal Health Insurance Coverage: Progress And Issues., Jonathan Gruber
Center for Policy Research
Jonathan Gruber was a key architect of Massachusetts’ ambitious health reform effort, and in 2006 became an inaugural member of the Health Connector Board, the main implementing body for that effort. He delivered this lecture on October 2, 2009, and his references are to Congressional bills that were under consideration on that date. He laid out the universal coverage debate that’s gone on for a long time in the United States; described a new solution that he think they found for Massachusetts; described how the Massachusetts reform works; and how it can be extended nationally. Finally he spent time on …