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Lecture E Ecological

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Title: Lecture 7 Ecological & Environmental Economics Author: Jakub Kronenberg Last modified by: Tomasz Bergier Created Date: 6/12/2003 10:07:45 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture E Ecological


1
Lecture EEcological Environmental Economics
2
Overview
  • Terminology
  • Conflicting views of the economys relationship
    to nature
  • No-Limits versus Limits to the economy views
  • Problems with current economic theory reality
  • Changing signals to the economy and
    internalization
  • Economy behaving like an ecosystem
  • Alternatives to measuring welfare by GDP
  • Globalization
  • Dow Jones Sustainability Index
  • Summary and Conclusions

3
Economics Terminology
  • Economics the study of the allocation of scarce
    means among competing ends. (Daly)
  • Capital wealth of property that is used or
    invested to produce more wealth the money with
    which an enterprise is started. Set of all
    physical things capable of satisfying human wants
    and subject to ownership. Fisher (1906)
  • natural, human, manmade, critical natural
  • Wealth Riches, possession of these.
  • Riches a great quantity of money or property or
    valuable possessions.
  • Money portable pieces that can be used as a
    medium of exchange. Banknotes or coins.

4
More...
  • Technology mechanical arts and applied
    sciences.
  • Growth increasing in size by accretion or
    assimilation of material. A quantitative
    increase in physical dimensions or size.
  • Economic Growth rising aggregate consumption
    (C) or output (Q).
  • Development bring to a fuller, greater, or
    better state.

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Empty World View Herman Daly
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Full World View
10
Physical Limits to Economy
  • Malthus absolute limits or scarcity
  • Ricardo relative limits
  • Marx limits due to social and political unrest

11
Malthus Diagram
12
Closed Economic System
Source Pezzey
13
Economy with Environmental Considerations
Source Pezzey
14
Prevailing Economic System
  • Private ownership of material resources
  • Public ownership of sinks
  • Perfect functioning of the market
  • Infinite subsitutability of resources
  • Subsidized disposal, energy, water

15
Mainstream economics FALLACIES
  • Marie Antoinette Economics
  • let agriculture fall, consume other 97 of GNP
  • Technological cavalry will save us
  • we can substitute for soil, air, water,
    forests...
  • Not Beating the Wife As Much As Before
  • false complacency for partial success

Source Davidson, E.A., You cant eat GNP,
Perseus, Cambridge MA 2000.
16
Main problems with current economic theory
  • Externalities
  • - costs not borne by those who create them

Badly defined property rights - environmental
goods perceived as commons
The environment is not subject of rights - the
environments interests are not legally
represented in the economic system
17
Externalities
  • Are equal to expenses on the elimination of a
    problem.
  • Distort the economic rationality by influencing
    decisions on the allocation of means.
  • Are reflected in the revenues of the whole social
    or consumer groups (e.g. by making other economic
    actors pay for the pollution caused by them, some
    companies are subsidized by those who incur
    those costs)
  • May lead to exploitation of some geographical
    regions by others when regional distribution of
    labor is taken into account (e.g. migration of
    polluting industries)

18
Problems with Current Economic Theory
  • Assumes market prices reflect consumer
    willingness to pay.
  • Assumes that consumers are the best judge of
    value and that community considerations are
    irrelevant.
  • Assumes consumers understand the value of
    ecological resources provided by many biological
    resources. Assumes consumer, aided by the market
    place, knows which species are unnecessary for
    ecosystem maintenance.
  • Assessment of economic value ignores many equity
    and moral considerations.
  • General failure to recognize that market prices
    are highly distorted.

M.D. Young, Sustainable Investment and Resource
Use, Parthenon Publishing Group, 1992, 24-25.
19
  • Socialism collapsed because it did not allow
    prices to tell the economic truth.
  • Capitalism may collapse because it does not
    allow prices to tell the ecological truth.

Source Dahle, 2001.
20
Worth of Ecosystem
  • Costanza et al 1997, The value of the worlds
    ecosytem goods and services, Nature,
    387253-260.
  • Pollination, Raw Materials Production, Water
    Supply, Waste Recycling Pollution Control,
    Recreation Education, Climate and Atmosphere
    Regulation, Soil Formation and Erosion Control,
    Control of Pests Diseases
  • Value of services US16 to US54 trillion
  • World GNP US18 trillion
  • Ecosystem-to-GNP ratio 1.8

21
Changing the Signals to the Economy
  • Currently taxes are applied to positive aspects
    of behavior wages, productivity, profit
  • It would be better to tax aspects that are
    negative waste, inefficiency, pollution
  • Possible mechanisms
  • Pollution taxes
  • Tradable pollution permits
  • Deposit fees
  • Shifting impacts of production to producers is
    called internalization

22
Internalization
  • Benefits of Internalization Processes
  • Transparency
  • Across All Sectors
  • Flexibility
  • Stimulates Innovation
  • Polluter Pays
  • Caveat must be transnational
  • Cooperation between sectors
  • Another example of interconnectedness

23
Government Use of Internalization Processes
  • Regulations
  • Performance Standards
  • Manufacturer Responsibility
  • Subsidies
  • Permits
  • Taxes Tax pollution, not production
    -Pollution, excise, severance, tax credits
  • Alternative National Accounting Systems
  • Government as Purchaser and Facilitator (Recycled
    Content Products/EPA Green Lights

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Tax shifts from work investment to
environmental damage
Country, year initiated Taxes Cut On Taxes Raised On Revenue Shifted ()
Sweden, 1991 Personal Income Carbon and Sulfur Emissions 1.9
Denmark, 1994 Personal Income Motor fuel, coal, electricity, water sales 2.5
Spain, 1995 Wages Motor fuel sales 0.2
Denmark, 1996 Wages, agricultrual property Carbon emissions pesticide, chlorinated solvents, battery sales 0.5
Netherlands, 1996 Personal income wages Natural gas and electricity sales 0.8
United Kingdom, 1996-7 Wages Landfilling 0.2
Finland, 1996-7 Personal income wages Energy sales landfilling 0.5
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Sustainable Economic System
  • Understands primary role of natural systems in
    the economy
  • Integrates functions of industrial and natural
    ecologies
  • Accounts for true costs of waste and disposal
  • Cradle-to-Grave responsibility for products
  • Penalizes waste, rewards efficiency
  • Provides for fair, just, meaningful, and
    fulfilling employment of human resources

29
Ecological Economics
  • A new transdisciplinary field addressing the
    relationship between ecosystems and economic
    systems in the broadest sense.
  • Uses the tools of conventional economics and
    ecology as appropriate.
  • Need to establish institutions that take the long
    term view, a la biology.
  • Economics as an ecological system.

R. Costanza, Ed. Ecological Economics, The
Science and Management of Sustainability,
Columbia University Press, 1991, 3-7.
30
Relationships of Economic Schools
31
Some Ecological Environmental EconomicsTerms
  • Hicksian Income income that does not forego
    future opportunities for others living off
    natures interest not its capital
  • Pigous Externalities a Pigouvian Tax is on paid
    by polluters equal to the marginal external cost
    borne by the pollutees. The polluter is thus
    informed about the full social costs of his
    operations and the victims can be fairly
    reimbursed (1920).
  • Solow Criterion Solow stated that
    substitutability would allow man to get along
    without natural resources (1974).
  • The Hartwick-Solow Rule Manufactured capital can
    substitute for natural capital

32
Hicksian Income
...income that can be consumed without reducing
future consumption possiblities
33
Hartwick-Solow Rule
Value of savings gt Value of Manufactured
Capital Deterioration Value of
natural Capital Depletion/ Degradation The
amount a society must save and reinvest to
maintain capital intact. The total capital stock
(natural plus manufactured must be nondeclining.
D. Pearce et al. The Economics of Sustainable
Development, Ann. Rev. of Energy Environ. 1994.
19 457-474.
34
The Ecological Economists
  • Kenneth Boulding (1910-1992) The Economics of
    the Coming Spaceship Earth (1966)
  • Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen (1906-1994) The
    Entropy Law and Economic Progress- the economy is
    not a reversible mechanical systems but subject
    to the 2nd Law
  • Herman Daly student of N. G-R., steady state
    economy

Gowdy, J. and Sabine OHara, Economic Theory for
Environmentalists, St Lucie Press, 1995, 129-132.
35
Biological Basis for the Economy
  • A.J. Lotka The Earth Machine or the Mill
    Wheel of Life
  • J.A. Hobson organic test as the test of welfare
  • N. Georgescu-Roegen thermodynamic limits,
    biophysical foundations of the economy
  • M.K. Hubbert biophysical constraints to economic
    growth
  • H.T. Odum economy as an ecosystem
  • G. Hardin institutional conditions for
    overexploitation
  • M. Rothschild Bionomics - genetic material of
    the economy is technology

36
Economy like ecosystem?
  • Eugene Odum
  • young ecosystems production, growth, quantity
  • mature ecosystems protection, stability, quality
  • Todays economy is like a young ecosystem
  • How do we create an economy that is like a mature
    ecosystem?

37
The metabolic analogy
Metabolism
Anabolism Catabolism
Degraded matter Degraded energy
Useful matter Useful Energy
Distribution
Economics
Anabolism Catabolism
Totally degraded matter Totally degraded energy
Useful matter Useful Energy
Distribution
Time
38
  • Bionomics
  • The economy behaves like a biological system
  • Behavior of biological systems applied to
    economics
  • Excellent forecasting tool (e.g. ATT demand for
    telephone service)

39
Alternative Measures of Welfare(Examples)
  • Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW)
  • Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI)
  • Human Development Index (HDI)

40
Human Development Index
  • Created by the United Nations Development Program
    (UNDP)
  • A composite of three indicators
  • Longevity life expectancy
  • Knowledge literacy, years of schooling
  • Standard of Living purchasing power based on
    GDP/capita

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Genuine Progress Indicator
  • Developed by non-profit Redefining Progress
  • Starts with real personal consumption, adjusts
    for income distribution
  • Subtracts
  • Crime Divorce
  • Resource depletion
  • Environmental Damage
  • Income Distribution
  • Pollution
  • Lifespan of durable goods public infrastructure
  • Dependence on foreign assets
  • Adds
  • Value of household work and parenting
  • Value of volunteer work

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Globalization
  • The World Trade Organization (WTO) (1995)
  • Established by final act of Uruguay Round of
    Multilateral Trade Negotiations in Marrakech in
    April 1994
  • Goal is to remove all obstacles to trade
  • How a product is made
  • By whom
  • What happens when it is made
  • Result Countries and regions cannot set
    standards, express values, or determine what they
    do or do not support
  • Outcomes Child labor, prison labor, forced
    labor, substandard working conditions and wages,
    environmental destruction, habitat loss, toxic
    waste production, synthetic hormones, genetically
    engineered materials
  • Membership 135 countries (but no plebiscite was
    held!)
  • Violates Agenda 21 and the Universal Declaration
    of Human Rights

48
Case Study Chiquita Brands International
  • Chiquita Brands International is a 2 billion
    company
  • Main product is bananas from Central America
  • History of labor abuses, heavy pesticide use
    (dichloropropane), resulting in birth defects and
    infertility
  • European countries biased import policy for
    bananas to small family farmers using fewer
    chemicals
  • U.S. sued and in WTO arbitrated case and won,
    forcing European countries to eliminate their
    bias
  • Other cases Countries must allow McDonalds,
    Blockbuster, Pizza Hut, etc. to operate within
    their borders

49
Dow Jones Sustainability Index
50
Dow Jones Trend
51
Dow Jones Sustainability Index vs SP 500
52
Leading DJ Sustainability Firms
  • Consumer
  • BMW AG, Germany
  • Fuji Photo, Japan
  • Unilever Plc., Netherlands
  • Bristol-Myers Squibb, US
  • Energy
  • Suncor Energy, Canada
  • Enbridge Inc., Canada
  • Utilities
  • Deutsche Telekom AG, Germany
  • TransAlta Corp., Canada
  • Financial
  • Credit Suisse Group, CH
  • Skandia Forsakrings AB, SW
  • Industrial
  • Honeywell Inc., US
  • Tomra Systems ASA, Norway
  • Technology
  • Fugitsu Ltd., Japan
  • ST Microelectronics, France

53
BP Sustainable profits?
  • Worlds largest supplier of solar modules
  • 200 million/yr
  • 1 billion/yr by 2007
  • Solar-powered H2O electrolysis hydrogen buses

54
WBCSD, US Members
  • 3M Company
  • Alcoa
  • ATT
  • Arthur D. Little
  • The Boston Consulting Group
  • Cargill Incorporated
  • CEMEX
  • CH2M Hill
  • Conoco
  • Dow Chemical Company
  • DuPont
  • Eastman Kodak Company
  • Ford Motor Company
  • General Motors Corporation
  • Interface
  • International Paper
  • Monsanto Company
  • Johnson Johnson
  • Phelps Dodge
  • Procter Gamble Company
  • Rohm and Haas
  • S.C. Johnson Son
  • Suncor Energy Inc
  • Texaco
  • Time Warner
  • Unocal
  • Westvaco Corporation
  • Weyerhaeuser Company
  • Xerox Corporation

55
Main Points
  • Everything is connected
  • The result is there are feedback loops between
    all elements of the system
  • Maldistribution of wealth is prevalent but not
    sustainable
  • GDP and GNP do not really represent welfare
    just economic throughput
  • The economy responds to signals it is sent
  • Cheap waste disposal
  • Low costs for emissions (air, water, land)
  • Low cost for environmental impacts
  • Cheap and subsidized resources
  • Tax benefits for resource depletion
  • How do you change the signals to the economy?

56
Summary and Conclusions
  • The current economic system is not sustainable
  • Depends on the scale of material/energy
    throughput
  • Subsidizes resource extraction and pollution
  • Taxes productive activities
  • Does not measure welfare
  • A system based on Ecological Economics would
  • Shift taxes to waste, inefficiency, and
    pollution, away from wages, profits,
    productivity, and investment
  • Focus on dematerialization, deenergization,
    decarbonization, and detoxification
  • Measure welfare instead of absolute monetary
    transactions
  • Support an EcoIndustrial revolution
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