About
Environmental markets are widely prescribed as an alternative to open-access regimes for natural resource management. The effectiveness of environmental markets, however, is predicated on a number of theoretical assumptions about market power, enforcement, and transaction costs, among other factors that may adversely affect environmental market performance. Given how pervasive these features are in practice, it is an empirical question whether net benefits are generated when an environmental market replaces an open-access regime, and if so, why.
We examined this question in the context of groundwater in southern California’s Mojave Desert, where we leveraged a natural experiment that allowed us to measure the gains from adopting property rights for groundwater in California.