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Introduction of Environmental Economics Why People Pollute? ?????: ??????????????? ???

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Title: Introduction of Environmental Economics Why People Pollute? ?????: ??????????????? ???


1
Introduction of Environmental Economics Why
People Pollute?????? ??????????????????QA??
????????
  • ??? ???
  • ??????????????
  • http//mail.tku.edu.tw/086138/

2
What is Economy?
  • The economy is a collection of technological,
    legal, and social arrangements through which a
    group of people seek to augment their material
    and spiritual standards of life.
  • See the next two pages for further discussions on
    their and material and spiritual.

more
3
Moral discussion ontheir
  • ????(?????)???(welfare) ,?? ??????????????
  • ???????????????,??????????????????????????? . . .

4
Moral discussion on material and spiritual
  • ????????????????,? material ? spiritual ?????

5
The fundamental circular flow model of economic
activity, QA

Output market
Demand for goods and services
Supply for goods and services
expenditures
revenues
Firms
Households
costs
income
Demand for resources
Factor market
Supply of resources
6
The materials balance model the interdependence
of economic activity and nature, QA

Nature
Natural resources drawn from nature
Residuals from production
Residuals from consumption
Output market
Supply for goods and services
Demand for goods and services
Firms
Households
Reduce ??Reuse ???Recycling ???
Reduce Reuse Recycling
Demand for resources
Factor market
Supply of resources
7
Produce Less Waste by Practicing the 3
RsReduce, Reuse, Recycle, QA
http//www.epa.gov/epaoswer/non-hw/muncpl/reduce.
htmreduce
  • ReduceSource reduction, often called waste
    prevention, means consuming and throwing away
    less.

8
  • ReuseReusing items by repairing them, donating
    them to charity and community groups, or selling
    them also reduces waste. (A shower curtain story,
    ???)
  • RecycleRecycling turns materials that would
    otherwise become waste into valuable resources
    and generates a host of environmental, financial,
    and social benefits.

9
????R , 31,??4R QA
  • Refuse??(???????)
  • http//recycle.epa.gov.tw/main.asp

10
Definition of economics
  • Economics is the study of how people choose to
    use their limited resources (land, labor, and
    capital (???) goods like trucks and machinery and
    buildings) to produce, exchange, and consume
    goods and services.

11
  • Natural resource economics
  • A field of study concerned with the flow of
    resources from nature to economic activity.
  • Environmental economics
  • A field of study concerned with the flow of
    residuals from economic activity back to nature.
  • residual The amount of a pollutant remaining in
    the environment after a natural or technological
    process has occurred.

12
Scope of environmental damage

13
Local pollution examples
  • Urban smog (smoke fog)
  • Solid waste pollution
  • Leaching contaminants such as lead and mercury
    may flow into soil or groundwater.

14
Regional pollution examples
  • Acid rain damages?????
  • human respiratory system
  • ecosystems soil, lake, forest
  • Building
  • http//www.guardians.net/egypt/sphinx/
  • http//mail.tku.edu.tw/086138/EnvFutures/TajMahal.
    doc

15
Global pollution examples
  • Ozone depletion --- ultraviolet radiation
  • Caused by CFCs (ChloFluoroCarbons)
  • Damages
  • weakens human immune system
  • cause skin cancer
  • affect ecosystems
  • Global warming --- ???,

16
An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and Its
Implications for United States National Security
  • http//www.ems.org/climate/pentagon_climate_change
    .htmlreport

17
Scene 1
  • Recent research, however, suggests that there is
    a possibility that this gradual global warming
    could lead to a relatively abrupt slowing of the
    ocean's thermohaline conveyor (???????) , which
    could lead to harsher winter weather conditions,
    sharply reduced soil moisture, and more intense
    winds in certain regions that currently provide a
    significant fraction of the world's food
    production. See home page

18
Scene 2
  • The research suggests that once temperature
    rises above some threshold (???,??), adverse
    weather conditions could develop relatively
    abruptly, with persistent changes in the
    atmospheric circulation causing drops in some
    regions of 5-10 degrees Fahrenheit in a single
    decade.

19
Scene 3
  • The report explores how such an abrupt climate
    change scenario could potentially de-stabilize
    the geo-political environment, leading to
    skirmishes, battles, and even war due to resource
    constraints such as

20
Scene 4
  • 1) Food shortages due to decreases in net global
    agricultural production 2) Decreased
    availability and quality of fresh water in key
    regions due to shifted precipitation patterns,
    causing more frequent floods and droughts3)
    Disrupted access to energy supplies due to
    extensive sea ice and storminess

21
Scene 5
  • As global and local carrying capacities are
    reduced, tensions could mount around the world,
    leading to two fundamental strategies defensive
    and offensive.  Nations with the resources to do
    so may build virtual fortresses around their
    countries, preserving resources for themselves. 
    Less fortunate nations especially those with
    ancient enmities with their neighbors, may
    initiate in struggles for access to food, clean
    water, or energy.  Unlikely alliances could be
    formed as defense priorities shift and the goal
    is resources for survival rather than religion
    (Israel?), ideology (Taiwan?), or national honor
    (Nazi?). ?? ????

22
Environmental objectives, QA
  • 1. Environmental quality (present oriented)
  • 2. Sustainable development (future oriented)
  • 3. Biodiversity (future oriented)

23
Environmental quality
  • Demand for zero pollution is impractical.
  • What pollution level is acceptable to society?
  • It is a difficult decision, and it depends on the
    following factors.
  • human health
  • pollution reduction expenditures
  • availability of pollution abatement technology
  • the risk of a given environmental hazard

24
Sustainable development
  • Definition The management of earths resources
    such that their long-term quality and abundance
    are ensured.
  • But, a nations primal objective is speeding its
    economic growth that is usually measured by GDP.

25
Definition of GDP??????
  • Gross domestic product (GDP) is the total value
    in money terms of all the production in a country
    in one year.
  • GDP calculation adding the price of goods and
    services produced.

26
The objective GDP growth
  • Economists and many government officials often
    use GDP as a measure of economic welfare.
  • The desire to achieve the targeted GDP growth may
    imply the growth of industrial productive
    activity.

27
GDP is not a good indicator!
  • The consequences of this expended productive
    activity are ecological damages and natural
    resource depletion.
  • ??????????????????????,??????????????????????,???
    ??GDP??????

28
Biodiversity
  • Biodiversity, or biological diversity, refers to
    the variety of distinct species, their genetic
    variability, and the variety of ecosystems they
    inhabit.
  • Biologists believe there may be as many as 100
    million species on earth.

29
Biodiversity
  • The major threat to biological species is the
    destruction of natural habitat.
  • Reasons for the destruction
  • population growth
  • poverty
  • economic development (which includes)
  • harvesting for tropical forests (woods for
    example)
  • conversion of natural land masses into
    alternative uses

30
Biodiversity
  • Other minor threats to biological species are,
  • pollutants
  • commercial activity
  • sport hunting
  • In contrast, killing in animal world is not for
    pleasure. Example Lion cub murder. Stronger or
    better gene are preserved through the killing
    process.

31
Why people pollute?
Main Entry 2goodFunction noun 3 a something
that has economic utility or satisfies an
economic want b plural personal property having
intrinsic value but usually excluding money,
securities, and negotiable instruments

32
Market
  • The interaction between consumers (or buyers) and
    producers (or sellers) to execute the exchange of
    a well-defined commodity.

33
Private goods
  • A commodity that has two characteristics, rivalry
    in consumption and excludability.
  • Examples ice cream, tissue paper, .
  • rivalry in consumption The consumption of the
    goods by one person precludes that of another.
  • excludabilityThe benefits of consumption are
    exclusive to that single consumer.

34
What is market failure?
  • ?market?classical microeconomic
    theory?????,???????????(outcome) ??????market
    failure ?
  • Inefficient market conditions (???)???????????????
    ?????(i.e., the equilibrium point under the
    allocative efficiency criterion),??????????market
    failure?

35
Market failure
  • Market failure (e. g., the problem of
    environmental pollution) is the result of an
    inefficient market condition such as,
  • imperfect information ?consumer????????????????
  • imperfect competition ?????entry barrier ? ?????
    ?
  • public goods (see next slide)

36
Public good
  • A commodity that is non-rival and non-excludable.
  • Examples light house, national defense,
    environmental quality.
  • non-rivalry in consumption The characteristic
    that makes it impossible (or prohibitively costly
    in a less strict sense) to prevent others from
    sharing in the benefits of a goods consumption.
  • non-excludability The characteristic of
    individual benefits of consumption such that one
    persons consumption of a good does not preclude
    that of another.

37
Free-ridership behavior
  • This behavior occurs when a rational consumer
    recognizes that the benefits of a public good are
    accessible by allowing someone else to purchase
    it.

38
Why people pollute?
  • Environmental quality is a public good.
  • Free-ridership is an attitude toward a public
    good.
  • This attitude implies everyone expects others to
    pay the abatement cost for the degraded
    environmental quality. As a result, pollution
    problems persist and no further improvements due
    to polluters free-ridership attitude.

39
Comment
  • The desire of profit motivated self-interest, or
    greed, is the cause of degraded environmental
    quality and ecological catastrophe.

40
Common property resources( Common???,???)
  • Those resources for which property rights are
    shared by some, not all, group of individuals.
  • Common property resources fall somewhere on a
    continuum between the extremes of pure public
    goods and private goods.
  • Examples fisheries, animal populations, road
    network common, and grass land for
    pasture(???,???).

41
A famous paper by a biologist, Hardin
  • Hardin, G., The tragedy of the commons,
    Science, 1681246-1248, 1968.
  • The system containing resources, e. g., food,
    air, energy, to which most people have ready
    access are called commons. ?common??public
    good?common property resources?
  • He presents a cold logic that indicates the ruin
    of a common is resulting from the self-interest
    motive of those resource exploiters.

42
A grass land for pasture example 2, p17
  • Four farmer families live on a grass land, farmer
    Jones is one of them, and each farmer has 10
    cows.
  • The carrying capacity (????)of this grass land is
    40 cattle.

43
Payoff matrix

The other farmers action
Does not add additional cows
Each add one additional cow
Farmer Jones action
10001010,000
880119,680
Does not add additional cows
10001010,000
880108,800
970109,700
820119,020
Add one more cow
9701110,670
820119,020
44
Farmer Jones rational decision
  • No matter what the other farmers do, Jones
    rational choice is to add one cow.
  • The other three farmers make the same rational
    choice independently.
  • The result 44 cows on this grass land.
  • Note that the carrying capacity allows 40 cows
    only.
  • The tragedy begins from these self-interest
    rational choices.

45
We can act luxuriously, as long as we take
within the limit of natures carrying capacity.
An example of non-tragedy American bison, 150
years ago http//news.nationalgeographic.com/new
s/2006/02/0223_060223_bison_video.html
46
The solutions to avoid the tragedy , QA
  • Direct provision of public goods
  • Examples roadways, parks, and fire protection,
  • Education and public information
  • Many people do not know the implications or the
    consequences of pollution or resources depletion
    problems.
  • Legislation
  • No laws, no enforcement.

---More---
47
The solutions to avoid the tragedy , QA
  • Assignment of property right
  • Property (e. g., park, lake, forest) owners will
    protect their property from damages.
  • Establish policies that raise the price of a
    product to reflect the social cost of
    environmental damages
  • Establish a market and a price for pollution

48
Bibliography
  • 1 Callan, Scott J., Thomas, Janet M.,
    Environmental Economics and Management Theory,
    Policy, and Applications, Dryden Press, 2000.
  • 2 Chechile, Richard and Carlisle Susan,
    Environmental Decision Making a
    multidisciplinary perspective, Van Nostrand
    Reinhold, 1991.
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