Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here’s how you know

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

HTTPS

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock (LockA locked padlock) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

    • Environmental Topics
    • Air
    • Bed Bugs
    • Chemicals, Toxics, and Pesticide
    • Emergency Response
    • Environmental Information by Location
    • Health
    • Land, Waste, and Cleanup
    • Lead
    • Mold
    • Radon
    • Research
    • Science Topics
    • Water Topics
    • A-Z Topic Index
    • Laws & Regulations
    • By Business Sector
    • By Topic
    • Compliance
    • Enforcement
    • Guidance
    • Laws and Executive Orders
    • Regulations
    • Report a Violation
    • Environmental Violations
    • Fraud, Waste or Abuse
    • About EPA
    • Our Mission and What We Do
    • Headquarters Offices
    • Regional Offices
    • Labs and Research Centers
    • Planning, Budget, and Results
    • Organization Chart
    • EPA History

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Environmental Economics

Consumer Demand and the Economy-wide Costs of Regulation: Modeling Households with Empirically Estimated Flexible Functional Forms

Paper Number: 2022-05

Document Date: 09/2022

Author(s): Ensieh Shojaeddini, Alex Marten, Andrew Schreiber, and Ann Wolverton

Subject Area(s): Costs of Pollution Control, Distributional Effects

JEL Classification:  D11, D12, D58, Q52, Q58

Keywords: Preference Structure; Households; Leisure; CGE; Distributional Effects; Environmental Regulation

Abstract:  This paper estimates flexible demand systems for heterogeneous households in the United States and links the estimated parameters with an economy-wide model to assess their relative contributions to the social cost of regulation. We estimate elasticities for several final demand categories as well as labor-leisure elasticities that are important for calibrating the labor-leisure choice in the economy-wide model and find that estimated elasticities are relatively similar across regions but vary meaningfully by income. Using the estimated elasticities, we explore the implications of both the functional form and its parameterization in a simplified computable general equilibrium model for the social and distributional costs of illustrative policy scenarios. Model variants with less flexible consumer demand systems overestimate social costs when policy shocks are small and underestimate social costs when policy shocks are large relative to models that assume more flexible consumer demand. Furthermore, we find that parameterizing the model with elasticities that vary with household income is important for adequately characterizing the distributional implications of a policy.

NOTE:  This paper replaces working paper number 2021-05 titled: “Consumer Demand Estimation for Heterogeneous U.S. Households”

This paper is part of the Environmental Economics Working Paper Series.

Consumer Demand and the Economy-wide Costs of Regulation: Modeling Households with Empirically Estimated Flexible Functional Forms (pdf) (2.18 MB)

Environmental Economics

  • Economics at EPA
    • About the National Center for Environmental Economics
    • Seminars
    • Current Opportunities
  • Data & Models
    • CGE Modeling for Regulatory Analysis
    • Mortality Risk Valuation
    • Waste Management and Land Cleanup
    • Economic Incentives
  • Economics Reports and Guidance
    • Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analyses
    • Working Paper Series
    • Journals and Book Chapters
Contact Us About Environmental Economics
Contact Us About Environmental Economics to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on August 8, 2025
  • Assistance
  • Spanish
  • Arabic
  • Chinese (simplified)
  • Chinese (traditional)
  • French
  • Haitian Creole
  • Korean
  • Portuguese
  • Russian
  • Tagalog
  • Vietnamese
United States Environmental Protection Agency

Discover.

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Budget & Performance
  • Contracting
  • EPA www Web Snapshot
  • Grants
  • No FEAR Act Data
  • Plain Writing
  • Privacy and Security Notice

Connect.

  • Data
  • Inspector General
  • Jobs
  • Newsroom
  • Regulations.gov
  • Subscribe
  • USA.gov
  • White House

Ask.

  • Contact EPA
  • EPA Disclaimers
  • Hotlines
  • FOIA Requests
  • Frequent Questions
  • Site Feedback

Follow.