How (not) to pay - Field experimental evidence on the design of REDD plus payments

Autor(en): Reutemann, Tim
Engel, Stefanie 
Pareja, Eliana
Stichwörter: BENEFITS; Business & Economics; Conditionality; DEFORESTATION; Ecology; Economics; EMISSIONS; ENFORCEMENT; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES; Environmental Studies; FOREST CONSERVATION; Incentive-based instruments; INCENTIVES; INDIVIDUAL RISK ATTITUDES; Payments for ecosystem services PES; PERFORMANCE; Policy design; REDD; SIMULATION
Erscheinungsdatum: 2016
Herausgeber: ELSEVIER
Journal: ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
Volumen: 129
Startseite: 220
Seitenende: 229
Zusammenfassung: 
Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) can use many design features. We investigate the impact of payment conditionality types, i.e. different specifications when to pay and when not to pay, for PES on deforestation and agricultural production in a lab-in-the-field experiment Our experiment also tests variations in contract period and payment volatility. We designed a highly visual simulation game to characterize the decision situation of a cattle rancher in Brazil. The player can expand extensive pasture by deforestation or intensify existing pasture. The model includes both a land and a capital constraint We applied the game in an economic, framed lab-in-the field experiment in Tocantins, Brazil. Payments conditional on forest carbon stock lead to slow, but steady deforestation, while payments conditional on forest carbon stock-change suppressed deforestation more strongly. But payments conditional on stock increase cattle production while payments conditional on stock-change have no effect on production. Thus, depending on the level of leakage, either type of conditionality can be more cost-effective in reducing global carbon emissions. Contracts with limited periods lead to strong deforestation after the end of the payment period. Payment volatility had no significant effect. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
ISSN: 09218009
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2016.05.020

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