Consumer welfare consequences of the California drought conservation mandate
Steven Buck, Mehdi Nemati, David L. Sunding
Abstract
Abstract We measure consumer welfare losses from reductions in water use following California's conservation mandate in 2015, which imposed utility service area‐specific conservation targets of 4% up to 36%. We document imperfect compliance with the mandate and discuss factors that may explain the pattern of reductions ultimately observed. The basis for calculating welfare losses is an econometric model of residential water demand that yields local demands with elasticities ranging from −0.56 to −0.10. In terms of economic efficiency, we estimate a 20% gain in consumer welfare under the efficient allocation of conservation reductions relative to the observed pattern of reductions.
Topics & Concepts
MandateWelfareEconomicsPublic economicsConsumer welfareEconomic surplusImperfectMicroeconomicsNatural resource economicsAgricultural economicsLinguisticsPolitical sciencePhilosophyMarket economyLawWater resources management and optimizationWater-Energy-Food Nexus StudiesFlood Risk Assessment and Management