Article

The animal welfare levy

Romain Espinosa et Nicolas Treich

Résumé

We provide a non-anthropocentric rationale for implementing a levy on meat consumption due to animal-welfare considerations. It operates as a Pigouvian tax and addresses externalities on farmed animals. Under total utilitarianism, the levy is a subsidy when an animal’s life is worth living, and a tax when it is not. The levy varies under alternative normative settings, illustrating the importance of population-ethics issues for the pricing of externalities in this context. Even under conservative assumptions, calibrated tax levels are substantial and would make most-intensive animal farms unprofitable. Taxes are significantly higher for chickens and pigs than for cows, in contrast to the taxation of other meat externalities.

Codes JEL

  • H41: Public Goods
  • I31: General Welfare, Well-Being
  • Q18: Agricultural Policy • Food Policy
  • Q50: General

Remplace

Romain Espinosa et Nicolas Treich, « The Animal-Welfare Levy », TSE Working Paper, n° 24-1503, janvier 2024.

Référence

Romain Espinosa et Nicolas Treich, « The animal welfare levy », Journal of the European Economic Association, 2025, à paraître.

Publié dans

Journal of the European Economic Association, 2025, à paraître