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DOES RECYCLING WASTE RESOURCES?

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DOES RECYCLING WASTE RESOURCES? W. Robert Reed Department of Economics University of Oklahoma My Main Point When recycling loses money it wastes resources and makes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DOES RECYCLING WASTE RESOURCES?


1
DOES RECYCLING WASTE RESOURCES?
  • W. Robert Reed
  • Department of Economics
  • University of Oklahoma

2
My Main Point
  • When recycling loses money
  • it wastes resources and makes society worse off.

3
Therefore
  • Government should not subsidize recycling
    efforts.
  • Public interest advertising that encourages
    unprofitable recycling lowers societys welfare.

4
A Little Background
  • Professor Reed wrote a column on recycling
    entitled Recycling Does More Harm Than Good
    that appeared in the Oklahoma Daily, March 26,
    1999.

5
Responses to Prof. Reeds Column
  • Robert Reed has over-simplified the issue of
    recycling to an economic issue. This
    conservative writer is very naïve and only seems
    to care about production and profits.
  • Dr. Reeds point that recycling wastes
    resources or denies more good for society is
    absurd.
  • W. Robert Reeds column on the evils of
    recycling troubled me. His idea that recycling
    is harmful because it costs more money grossly
    misses the point.
  • Professor Anex wrote a response entitled
    Recycling Equals Smart Economics that was
    published in the Oklahoma Daily, April 9, 1999

6
Prof. Anexs Counter Argument
  • it is much less expensive to use recycled
    aluminum and cardboard than to tear the tops off
    of mountains in Jamaica for Bauxite or grow trees
    for wood pulp.
  • Recycled materials are so valuable that they are
    traded on the Chicago Board of Trade.
  • Manufacturing firms such as Lucent Technologies
    have implemented extensive internal recycling
    programs because they reduce costs.

7
The Main Point Restated
  • When recycling loses money
  • it wastes resources and makes society worse off.

8
Definition of a Resource
  • A resource is anything that has the potential to
    contribute to societys well-being.

9
A Happiness Test
  • Question How could we tell what would make you
    happier? Having a new pair of Nike athletic
    shoes? Or having a new pair of Old Navy jeans?
  • Answer By observing how much money you are
    willing to pay for these items.

10
Another Happiness Test
  • Question How could we tell what would make
    SOCIETY happier? Having one more pair of Nike
    athletic shoes? Or having one more pair of Old
    Navy jeans?
  • Answer By observing how much money SOCIETY is
    willing to pay for these items.

11
Prices and Information
  • The price of a good tells us how much society is
    willing to pay for it.
  • Given certain assumptions, the price of a good
    measures the approximate contribution of that
    good to societys happiness.
  • We will discuss these assumptions later.
  • Thus, the fact that PT-BONE STEAK gt PMcDONALDS
    HAMBURGER tells us
  • The fact that PBMW 528 gt PFORD ESCORT tells us
  • The fact that PHOME CLOSE TO CAMPUS gt PHOME AWAY
    FROM CAMPUS tells us

12
The Application to Recycling
  • Professor Anex It takes resources to recycle
    resources
  • Question Are the resources used up in
    recycling more or less valuable than the
    resources that recycling saves?
  • Answer Thats exactly what prices tell us!

13
The Profit Table
14
The Profit Table Applied to RecyclingRecycling
Paper at UCLA
15
Interpretation
  • Recycling paper at UCLA lowered societys
    welfare.
  • That is, the resources destroyed in recycling
    paper (labor, energy, machines) were more
    valuable to society than the resources saved.
  • In other words, UCLAs recycling program
    wasted societys resources.

16
Using the Profit Table to Evaluate Recycling
Arguments I
  • The revenue from recycling doesnt offset any of
    the costs of recycling, because right now the
    market price for materials is at an all-time low.
    We are in an over-supply situation. The market
    is saturated, and prices are sinking.-Carl
    Hultberg, NYU recycling coordinator.

17
Case Study I The Price of Recycled Paper is Low
18
Using the Profit Table to Evaluate Recycling
Arguments II
  • Our goal is not to make money. We are trying to
    reduce the amount of trash that is taken to
    landfills, regardless of the cost.-E.J. Kirby,
    Recycling Director, UCLA

19
Case Study II Recycling to Save Scarce Landfill
Space
20
Using the Profit Table to Evaluate Recycling
Arguments III
  • We need to recycle paper in order to save
    Americas valuable timber resources.

21
Case Study III Recycling to Save Scarce Trees
22
Sufficient but Not Necessary Assumptions
  • Social Welfare Function Utilitarianism with
    Constant Marginal Utility of Income Across
    Individuals.
  • Louis Kaplow, A Fundamental Objection to Tax
    Equity Norms A Call for Utilitarianism,
    National Tax Journal Vol. 48, No. 4 (December
    1995) 497-514.
  • Prices are market-generated prices.
  • Relevant markets are not characterized by market
    failures such as externalities, public goods,
    or monopoly/monopsony.

23
Failure of These Assumptions to Hold is a
Necessary But Not Sufficient Condition to
Invalidate the Argument
  • That is, if one or more of these assumptions do
    not hold, they could make the argument against
    subsidized recycling stronger, not weaker!

24
Conclusion
  • When recycling is good for society, it will not
    lose money. When it does lose money, it is not
    good for society.
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