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Environmental Economics and

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Title: Environmental Economics and


1
  • Environmental Economics and
  • the Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Miller (2003) Chapter 2

2
Economy and Economics
  • An economy a system of production,
    distribution, and consumption of goods and
    services that satisfy peoples wants or needs
  • Economics the science that studies the choices
    that people make when demand (need) gt supply
  • Scarcity our inability to satisfy our demand
    (need)
  • All economic problems arise from scarcity

3
Resource Allocation
  • Resource allocation all nations and societies
    must allocate their resources in order to meet
    their needs
  • When allocating limited resources
  • Need to make choices
  • The cost of these choices opportunity cost (the
    cost associated with giving up an opportunity)
  • Some basic economic questions to ask when dealing
    with scarcity and efficiency in resource
    allocation
  • What goods and services to produce?
  • How to produce them?
  • How to distribute them?
  • For whom to produce them?

4
Economic Systems
  • Two major types
  • Pure command economic system
  • Market economic system

5
Pure Command Economic System
  • This theoretical ideal has no markets -
    government makes all economic decisions
  • No person may independently decide to open and
    run any kind of business
  • The government decides what goods and services
    are to be produced
  • The government sells these goods and services
  • The government decides how the talents and skills
    of its workers are to be used

6
Market Economic System
  • This theoretical ideal has no governments -
    markets are used to make all economic decisions
  • A nation's economic decisions are the result of
    individual decisions by buyers and sellers in the
    marketplace (all buying and selling is based
    purely on competition)
  • For example, U.S. has a market economic system
  • People there may go to work where they choose
  • They are free to go into business on their own
  • The price that the sellers charge for their goods
    or services will depend on the prices charged by
    the competitors

7
  • In theory, economic decisions could be undertaken
    exclusively through markets or governments.
  • In reality, all economies rely on a mix of both
    markets and governments for economic decisions -
    mixed economy.

8
Economic Growth
  • Virtually all economies strive for economic
    growth, usually by maximising the flow of matter
    and energy resources by means of
  • More population growth (i.e. more consumers),
    and/or
  • More consumption per person
  • All economic goods and services have both
    internal and external costs.

9
Internal Costs
  • For example, the price a consumer pays for a new
    car reflects the costs of
  • Factory
  • Raw materials
  • Labour
  • Marketing
  • Distribution
  • Mark up (profit)
  • Running costs
  • All these direct and indirect costs, which are
    paid for by the seller and the buyer of an
    economic good internal costs

10
Hidden External Costs
However, extracting and processing raw materials
to make and run cars
  • Deplete non-renewable energy and mineral
    resources
  • Produce solid and hazardous wastes
  • Disturb land
  • Pollute air and water
  • Contribute to global climate change
  • Reduce biodiversity

These harmful effects passed on to the workers,
the public, the environment, and in some cases
future generations external costs
11
  • External costs (the harmful costs) not included
    in market price
  • People do not connect them with car ownership
  • Still, everyone pays these hidden costs sooner or
    later, in the form of
  • Poorer health
  • Higher costs for health care and health insurance
  • Higher taxes for pollution control

12
Internalizing External Costs
  • For most economists, the solution to the harmful
    costs of goods and services
  • Include such costs in the market prices of
    goods and services
  • Internalizing external costs
  • However, internalizing external costs will not
    occur unless required by government regulation.
  • Why?

13
Environmental Costs
  • By internalizing external costs (e.g. voluntarily
    install pollution controls)
  • ? Need to sell goods and services at higher price
    (compared to competitors who do not care about
    external costs of their goods and services)
  • ? At competitive disadvantage
  • ? Profits decline
  • How can the government help about this?

14
  • Government can
  • Impose taxes
  • Pass laws
  • Provide subsidies
  • Use other strategies that encourage or force
    producers to include external costs in market
    prices
  • ?Market price full costs of goods and services

15
Full-Cost Pricing
  • Full-cost pricing Internalizing external costs
  • At full-cost pricing,
  • Market price Internal costs External costs
    (short- and long-term)
  • Must have government action few companies will
    willingly increase their cost of business and
    raise consumer prices (competitive disadvantage)

16
Good News about Internalizing External Costs
  • Internalizing external costs of pollution and
    degradation would make
  • Preventing pollution more profitable than
    cleaning it up
  • Waste reduction, recycling, and reuse more
    profitable than burying or burning most of the
    waste produced
  • Consumers accessible to information about
    environmental and health effects of goods and
    services

17
  • To internalize external costs, governments must
    also
  • Reduce income, payroll, and other taxes
  • Withdraw subsidies and tax breaks that encourage
    environmentally harmful businesses
  • (e.g. the government subsidies for unsustainable
    forestry, for overfishing, and for using
    non-renewable fossil fuels, which discourage
    energy conservation and development of less
    harmful renewable energy alternatives)
  • Otherwise, consumers will have to pay higher
    market prices without tax relief ? policy
    guaranteed to fail!

18
More Good News about Internalizing External Costs
  • Some goods and services may cost less because
    internalizing external costs encourages producers
    to
  • Find ways to cut costs by inventing more
    resource-efficient and less-polluting methods of
    production
  • Offer more environmentally beneficial
    (sustainable) products i.e. green products

19
What is Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA)?
  • A widely used tool for making economic decisions
    about how to control pollution and manage
    resources
  • Comparing the estimated short- and long-term
    costs (losses) with the estimated benefits
    (gains) of a proposal (e.g. whether a wetland
    should be filled)
  • Often used to decide whether to proceed with a
    given project
  • All costs and benefits are given monetary values
    and compared by means of a cost-benefit ratio
  • A favourable ratio for a project
  • ? Benefits of project gt Costs
  • ? Project is cost-effective

20
Zero Pollution
  • For more extreme environmentalists
  • Zero pollution
  • Ideally, yes but in the real world, not
    necessarily!
  • Natural processes can handle some of our wastes
  • We can tolerate low air pollution levels
  • Pollution control costs money
  • ? We cannot afford to get to zero pollution!
  • Beyond a certain point
  • Clean-up costs gt Harmful costs of pollution
  • Businesses go bankrupt
  • People lose their jobs

21
Case Study Cleaning Up Air Pollution
The cost of removing each additional unit of
pollution rises exponentially ? Cheaper to
prevent it than to clean it up (See Fig 2-6,
Miller (2003))
22
The Benefits Of Clean Air
Additional benefits to be derived from pollution
control tend to level off and become negligible
as pollutants are reduced.
23
Cost-Effectiveness
Optimum (most favourable) cost-effectiveness is
achieved at lt100 pollution control. Spending
more to achieve maximum reduction may yield
little benefit and hence may be cost-ineffective.
24
Optimum Level Of Pollution
High
Low
To find the break-even point, economists plot (1)
estimated costs of cleaning up and (2) estimated
social costs of pollution (harmful external costs
of pollution to society), then add the two curves
to get a third curve - the total costs. Lowest
point on the third curve (the breakeven point)
optimum level of pollution. This graph shows the
optimum level at 50, but the actual level varies
with the pollutant. (See Fig. 2-7, Miller (2003))
25
Limitations about CBA
  • There are several controversies about CBA, one
    involves the discount rate
  • Discount rate An estimate of a resources
    future economic value compared with its present
    value
  • Size of the discount rate a primary factor
    affecting the outcome of any CBA

26
Discount Rates
At a zero discount rate, a forest of redwood
trees worth 1 million today will still worth 1
million in 50 years so no need to cut them
down.
However, at a 10 annual discount rate (typically
used by businesses, U.S. Office of Management and
Budget, World Bank), the same trees 10,000 in
50 years. ? Makes sense from short-term economic
standpoint to cut the trees down as quickly as
possible and invest the money in something else.
27
High Or Low Discount Rates?
  • Supporters of high discount rates (5-10) argue
    that inflation will reduce the value of their
    earnings
  • ? Encourage rapid exploitation of resources for
    immediate profits
  • ? Impossible for sustainable use of potentially
    renewable resources
  • Critics suggest
  • 0 (or negative) discount rate
  • ? Should be used to protect unique and
    scarce resources
  • 1-3 discount rates
  • ? Encourage more sustainable use of resources

28
Who Benefits And Who Is Harmed?
  • In U.S. 100,000 people die each year from
    exposure to hazardous chemicals and other safety
    hazards at work
  • In many developing countries even worse
  • Critical Thinking
  • (1) Is it a necessary or unnecessary cost of
    doing business?
  • (2) How do you put a value (price tag) on good
    health, clean air and water, wildlife habitats,
    endangered species?
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