- #106
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Re: Regulating Price
Could you give an example of how it would be exploited? I want to know more what an energy company would do in such a situation. Is there existing situation where the government regulates the price of things?
There is minimum wage. It is similar but opposite.
The government regulates the security deposit of rental agreements. I think the max at where I am is three months (the tenant cannot be asked to pay more than three months of security deposit, regardless of reason). In San Francisco, there are regulations that the rent could only increase so much each year, and that if a tenant lived at a place for 10 years, the landlord cannot evict the tenant.
Could there be a similar regulation based on carbon emission? Suppose a power plant has high carbon emission, the government can have a forumla and calculate the maximum increase in energy price. For plants that are really bad, the rate limit might less than 1, meaning they have to lower their price. These increases and decreases are based on the current price. Any customer could check their bills.
Suppose a law is written with the intention to reduce carbon emission, could the law have a clause saying that the company cannot try to shift the cost to the customer, that the company will take the responsibility itself? This allows the customers to sue the companies if they find the companies trying to shift the burden.
Chalnoth said:Well, it seems to me that that would be more prone to exploitation than a cap-and-trade system, largely because energy costs vary significantly from place to place.
Could you give an example of how it would be exploited? I want to know more what an energy company would do in such a situation. Is there existing situation where the government regulates the price of things?
There is minimum wage. It is similar but opposite.
The government regulates the security deposit of rental agreements. I think the max at where I am is three months (the tenant cannot be asked to pay more than three months of security deposit, regardless of reason). In San Francisco, there are regulations that the rent could only increase so much each year, and that if a tenant lived at a place for 10 years, the landlord cannot evict the tenant.
Could there be a similar regulation based on carbon emission? Suppose a power plant has high carbon emission, the government can have a forumla and calculate the maximum increase in energy price. For plants that are really bad, the rate limit might less than 1, meaning they have to lower their price. These increases and decreases are based on the current price. Any customer could check their bills.
Suppose a law is written with the intention to reduce carbon emission, could the law have a clause saying that the company cannot try to shift the cost to the customer, that the company will take the responsibility itself? This allows the customers to sue the companies if they find the companies trying to shift the burden.