In the literature, auto manufacturers' incentives for adopting electric vehicles and their interactions with government policies are understudied, especially through an analytical approach. We develop a game-theoretic model to investigate what vehicle types should be produced from both private firms' and social perspectives. We then propose an EV-subsidy/environmental-tax policy and derive the optimal policy parameters that maximise social welfare. The monopoly and duopoly markets are examined and compared, and it is shown that the government should charge a higher environmental tax, while offering a lower EV subsidy, in the duopoly market than in the monopoly market.
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Shao et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a286490a974eb0d3c012c8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3828/jtep.2019.53.2.175
Jing Shao
Hangjun Yang
University of International Business and Economics
Anming Zhang
Journal of transport economics and policy
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