Subsidy reduction policies in clean product promotion: Pre-announced or dynamic?
研究了政府推广清洁产品时,预公告补贴削减与动态补贴削减两种政策的效果,发现前者减少消费者延迟购买但降低总销量,后者则相反,建议根据市场渗透率选择。
Governments often use purchase subsidies to promote clean products, such as rooftop solar photovoltaic systems and new energy vehicles, aiming for clean development. However, purchase subsidies increase governments’ fiscal burden and create consumer over-reliance, with consumers delaying purchases in anticipation of higher future subsidies. To reduce policy costs and lessen consumers’ delayed purchases, governments attempt to implement a subsidy reduction policy that gradually reduces subsidy levels, with two options: pre-announced subsidy reduction (PS, where future subsidy plans are pre-announced) and dynamic subsidy reduction (DS, where governments announce a downward trend but adjust subsidy levels dynamically). We employ a two-period Stackelberg game model to investigate the optimal policy for promoting clean products. Both PS and DS alleviate delayed purchases, but the government’s subsidy strategies differ. Under PS, the government adopts a consistent subsidy strategy or follows a decreasing subsidy path, which lessens fiscal costs but at the expense of total sales of clean products. In contrast, under DS, the government maintains a consistent subsidy level over two periods, which rather increases the total adoption of clean products and contradicts the intuition that dynamic subsidy setting is meant for maintaining policy flexibility. Moreover, our comprehensive comparisons reveal a policy choice dilemma: the government should choose PS to prevent delayed purchases but DS to enhance the adoption of clean products. We suggest choosing the appropriate approach based on the market penetration of clean products: PS seems more favorable when sales of clean products are sufficiently high, while the opposite is true for DS.