TOWARD CONTROLLING NONPOINT
SOURCE POLLUTION OF GROUNDWATER:
A HIERARCHICAL POLICY FORMULATION GAME
MAHADEV G. BHAT, ROBERT R. ALEXANDER
and BURTON C. ENGLISH
Abstract:
An integrative approach to
formulating agricultural policy instrument levels is suggested for
controlling groundwater quality deterioration from agricultural
chemical-use, while reconciling the conflicting goals of primary
interest groups in the farm policy process. The paper develops a
Stackelberg game-theoretic model of public policy formation that
simultaneously determines endogenous price supports and nitrogen-use
quota, as well as the optimal permissible water contamination. The
analysis distinguishes between the private and social opportunity
costs of producing agricultural crops and using groundwater as a
repository for nitrate leachate from agricultural sources. It is
recognized that the social benefit of using nitrogen in agriculture
is less than the private benefit to producers. Private and social
benefits, as well as optimal production and pollution solutions, will
vary as the relative weights which policymakers attach to different
social constituents change. The method developed in this paper may be
applicable to any policy process in which policymakers exercise
indirect influence over industrial production decisions through
economic instruments.