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The Electric Vehicle Transition and the Economics of Banning Gasoline Vehicles

Stephen P. Holland, Erin T. Mansur, Andrew J. Yates

2021American Economic Journal Economic Policy74 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electric vehicles have a unique potential to transform personal transportation. We analyze this transition with a dynamic model capturing falling costs of electric vehicles, decreasing pollution from electricity, and increasing vehicle substitutability. Our calibration to the US market shows a transition from gasoline vehicles is not optimal at current substitutability: a gasoline vehicle production ban would have large deadweight loss. At higher substitutability, a ban can reduce deadweight loss from vehicle mix and adoption timing inefficiencies. A cumulative gasoline vehicle production quota has smaller deadweight loss, and an electric vehicle purchase subsidy is more robust to regulator misperceptions about substitutability. (JEL H23, L51, L62, L94, Q53)

Topics & Concepts

Deadweight lossElectricityElectric vehicleEconomicsSubsidyGasolineProduction (economics)Natural resource economicsMicroeconomicsWelfareEngineeringMarket economyWaste managementPower (physics)Electrical engineeringQuantum mechanicsPhysicsEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesElectric Vehicles and InfrastructureConsumer Market Behavior and Pricing
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