1 / 14

Environmental economics 2

Environmental economics 2. 2 different approaches. Ecological paradigm: concerned with the health and survival of ecosystems Economic paradigm: concerned with maximizing human welfare BUT: does that mean current welfare (short-term) or future welfare (long-term)??. Ecological paradigm.

jaguar
Download Presentation

Environmental economics 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environmental economics2

  2. 2 different approaches • Ecological paradigm: concerned with the health and survival of ecosystems • Economic paradigm: concerned with maximizing human welfare • BUT: does that mean current welfare (short-term) or future welfare (long-term)??

  3. Ecological paradigm • Ecologists think of maximizing long-term welfare • What do we call that? • Sustainability

  4. Economic paradigm • Economists often concerned with how the environment affects human well-being • Environment has no value by itself (intrinsic value)

  5. Environmental economics • Maximizing human welfare MUST INCLUDE properly valuing ecosystems and the costs of environmental degradation

  6. Environmental economics • To an economist, environmental issues fall into two areas: • Generation of wastes and pollutants as unwanted byproducts of human activities • The management of renewable and nonrenewable natural resources

  7. How much is too much? • How much pollution should be permitted? • Current levels too high? . . . Or too low? • Shouldn’t pollution be zero? • Why or why not?

  8. Market economy • For many goods, supply and demand determine a market equilibrium. • Examples: iPads, Modern Warfare II, bananas • BUT: for natural resources or environmental quality • Not true market goods • Hard to price

  9. Externalities • Key concept • Whenever an economic activity creates ``spillovers’’ on people not directly involved in the activity, there is an externality. = unintentional side effects • Usually negative

  10. KEY Slide Externalities are social costs Supply + social cost • When externalities occur, a company’s private production cost is NOT the same as the social cost of production. • Social costs might include costs of pollution cleanup or added healthcare costs • When external costs are ADDED to the costs of production, the supply curve shifts left (for a given price, suppliers will supply less) supply What happens to the price of a product if externalities are Included?

  11. Externalities • A factory that pollutes a river creates involuntary costs (negative externalities) for anyone using the river • Fishermen –can’t fish or can’t eat catch • Boaters –unable to boat or increased maintenance • Swimmers – lose swimming spot; increased illness • Water suppliers – costs of making water safe

  12. Externalities • There can be positive externalities • Examples? • Your neighbor paints her house and improves her yard with new landscaping. She bears all the cost. She reaps some benefit. • YOU and other neighbors also benefit

  13. How deal with externalities? • Several ways • Command-and-control (government regulation) • Tax • Subsidy • Market approach (ie, cap-and-trade)

  14. Tax • A tax may be imposed on a product that causes environmental harm, such as a pollutant. • The tax is a way to INTERNALIZE the externality—that is, to REVEAL the true cost of the product (including the social costs such as environmental degradation or health impacts). • What is the effect?

More Related