When a factory emits sulfur dioxide, it imposes costs on health, agriculture, and ecosystems that the factory and its customers don't pay. A Pigouvian tax sets a per-ton charge on emissions equal to the monetary value of these external costs. Now the factory faces the full social cost of its emissions in its profit calculation — and reduces output, invests in scrubbers, or switches fuels until the marginal cost of further reduction equals the tax. The tax doesn't tell the factory how to reduce emissions; it gives the factory every incentive to find the cheapest way to do so. That is the efficiency advantage of Pigouvian taxation over command-and-control regulation.
What it is
A Pigouvian tax (named after economist Arthur Pigou, who formalized the concept in 1920) is a per-unit tax on a good or activity levied at a rate equal to the marginal external cost it imposes at the socially efficient level of output. By adding the external cost to the private cost, it makes private actors behave as if they were bearing the full social cost — producing the efficient quantity without a mandate.
Before Pigouvian tax: private MC < social MC → market produces Q_market > Q_efficient After Pigouvian tax (set at marginal external cost): private MC + tax = social MC → market produces Q_efficient
The government collects tax revenue equal to the tax rate × the corrected output quantity. This "double dividend" — correcting the externality and raising revenue — is why Pigouvian taxes are favored by economists across the political spectrum.
The intended effect
The Pigouvian tax is designed to internalize the externality — force producers and consumers to face the full social cost of their activities. Unlike a quantity regulation that tells a firm exactly how much to reduce emissions, a Pigouvian tax gives the firm flexibility: it can reduce emissions by any method that costs less than the tax, so abatement effort is directed to the lowest-cost opportunities across all firms. This achieves the environmental target at minimum total cost.
The EPA's methodology for estimating the social cost of carbon is essentially the Pigouvian tax rate calculation: it estimates the present value of all future damages from one additional ton of CO₂ emitted today. This number — currently in the range of $51–$190 per ton depending on the discount rate used — is the theoretically correct carbon tax rate under the Pigouvian framework.
The tradeoff
The central challenge is accurate measurement of the external cost. Set too high, the Pigouvian tax over-corrects and causes underproduction. Set too low, it under-corrects and the externality persists. External costs from pollution are spatially and temporally dispersed, involve uncertain future damages, and require monetizing non-market impacts like human health and ecological loss — estimation uncertainty is substantial.
A second issue: Pigouvian taxes are politically difficult. Those subject to them — polluting industries, tobacco users, drivers — bear concentrated costs even when the broader social benefit is large and diffuse.
How it plays out in practice
The federal cigarette excise tax (currently $1.01 per pack) functions as an approximate Pigouvian tax on smoking's external costs — healthcare externalities borne by insurers and public health systems, secondhand smoke harms to non-smokers. The CDC's tobacco cost data estimates smoking's annual economic cost at over $300 billion — the external cost that the current tax rate only partially captures.





