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ECONOMICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT

ECONOMICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT. How much is clean air worth? Can you charge somebody for damaging your air? How much are you willing to pay for clean air? Should you have to pay for clean air?. Have you ever caught a fish off the UST pier? Is cutting down the rainforests efficient?

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ECONOMICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT

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  1. ECONOMICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT

  2. How much is clean air worth? • Can you charge somebody for damaging your air? • How much are you willing to pay for clean air? • Should you have to pay for clean air?

  3. Have you ever caught a fish off the UST pier? • Is cutting down the rainforests efficient? • What market incentives are there for research on the environment? • How can the environment be priced and sold? • Does Hong Kong have any mechanisms for valuing its environment?

  4. Lecture Objectives: • Review Advantages and Limitations of Market Economics • Understand how economics is creating new principles and guidelines for business activity.

  5. Comparing: • Neo-classical Economics • Environmental Economics • Ecological Economics • To reveal policy implications

  6. What is an economy supposed to do? • What is the Neo-classical approach?

  7. What is a market? • A system of exchange

  8. What is exchanged? • Resources: land, labor, capital (ie. goods or services in some form)

  9. How does the market work? • Matching of supply and demand

  10. Why is the market such a good system? • Optimal use of resources: buyers force competition on suppliers; greatest return for the efforts of suppliers • Pareto efficiency: “a situation where it is impossible to make one person better off without making anyone else worse off” • Meaning: allocation of resources to the uses that will bring the greatest overall increase in production and monetary value by matching producers with the highest bidders

  11. What enables the market to work? • Price or Value setting • Profit motive • Private property • Government and other regulating institutions

  12. Does the market operate perfectly? 1. General Market Failures: • Monopoly; • information asymmetry; • missing markets; • transaction costs.

  13. Market Failures • What company did you buy your air from? • How much did you pay for your air? How was that price set? • How clean was the air you bought? How do you know? • How can a company stop other companies from dirtying its air? What can you do if someone makes your air dirty after you bought it? • What rate of return should a company expect to get from investing in air quality?

  14. 2. Environmental Market Failures: • Failure to value the environment: unpriced use values; option values; existence values; bequest values • Lack of information • Externalities • Common Access Resources/Sinks • Discounting the future • Missing Markets

  15. Externalities • “An unintended cost or benefit of production or consumption that is not reflected in the price of the related transactions. Externalities are often borne by people who are not parties to the transactions that create them.”

  16. Externalities • Define the externalities of your company: who are the parties to the monetary transaction and who or what pays for the impacts of the transaction

  17. Discounting the Future with Net Present Value (NPV) NPV = x/(1+.10)nyrs X + your present money value .10 = the discount rate nyrs = the power of how many years down the future you are looking at NPV of 100 dollars in five years with a discount rate of 10% is 100/(1+.10)5 or $62.09

  18. Environmental & Ecological Economics • Why should CLP pay for pollution controls in Guangdong rather than in Hong Kong? • Are there any economic tools we can use to value Hong Kong’s environment? • Are air-conditioned shopping malls reasonable substitutes for clean air and clean beaches? • What impact would the use of the Mai Po conservation area for building houses have on Hong Kong’s net worth?

  19. Cleaner air on horizon by year's end: LiaoImprovements to Guangdong power plants will cut pollution, says minister • Guangdong's biggest cluster of power plants, at Humen in Dongguan - which are blamed for much of Hong Kong's air pollution - are being equipped with desulphurisation devices to cut emissions. • In the longer term, Dr Liao hopes a cross-border emission trading scheme can be set up to  assist other power plants in Guangdong to cut emissions in a more cost-effective manner. In the meantime, the government has started talks with CLP Power and Hongkong Electric on emission reduction and an emission trading scheme.

  20. Hong Kong administration states preference for system to be used in cross-border emissions trading …the government says a "cap and trade" method is best for Hong Kong. Under this system, the government would set an emissions cap as well as a timetable for this to be lowered. The capped quantity of emissions would then be distributed to sources of air pollution, including power plants and large factories, in the form of emission allowances or permits. Polluters who fail to meet the requirements of the cap would have to buy emissions reduction credits from others who could successfully lower their emissions below the capped level

  21. Environmental Economics: From Market Failure to Government Failure • Limited information of how to deal with specific environmental problems (of area or industry) and of firms’ capability to deal with or hide environmental impact • Limited resources to regulate, monitor and enforce • Command and Control regulations: uniform standards and technologies

  22. Policy Guidelines from Environmental Economics:I. Benefits of Using the Market (as opposed to CAC) • 1. Cost effectiveness: example, emission trading credits • 2. Substitution and technological advance: example, green taxes • 3. Other institution/market based schemes: deposit refund schemes, environmental bonds, transferable quotas, transfer of development rights.

  23. Policy Guidelines from Environmental EconomicsII. Better Valuation of Non-market Valued Assets • 1. Financial Costs • 2. Averting Behavior • 3. Travel Cost Method • 4. Hedonic Pricing • 5. Contingent Evaluation For: Better Cost-Benefit Analysis, regulations, fines

  24. Environmental Economics and Ecological Economics Weak vs. Strong Sustainability

  25. Environmental Economics and Ecological Economics: Weak vs. Strong Sustainability • Efficiency standard vs. ecological standard • Discount rate (growth) driven vs. discount rate (growth) limiting • Resources as inputs & outputs of unlimited economic system vs. economic system as limited subsystem of ecosystem • Substitutability vs. complementarity

  26. The Environmental Economics Trade-off

  27. S = solar energy H = heat M = matter E = energy natural capital man-made capital Neo-classical Empty World Environmental Economics World S Recycle? Recycle M M M M H Economy Economy S E E E E Ecosystem Ecosystem H Ecosystem Figure 1: The Economy as an Open Subsystem of the Ecosystem (Daly 1996:49).

  28. Ecological Economics Full World Environmental Economics World S S Recycle Recycle M M M M Economy Economy E E E E Ecosystem Ecosystem H H S = solar energy H = heat M = matter E = energy natural capital man-made capital Figure 1: The Economy as an Open Subsystem of the Ecosystem (Daly 1996:49).

  29. Manufactured and knowledge capital for natural capital Land, labor and capital substitutability Same service by different product Technological fixes Ecosystem resilience Manufactured capital depends on natural capital Uniqueness, uncertainty and irreversibility Ecosystem services Growth outpaces substitution Ecosystem fragility Substitutability vs. Complementarity

  30. Policy Influences from Ecological Economics • Strict demands for environmental protection reflected in: • Environmental impact assessment • Natural preservation areas (parks, reserves) • Absolute limitations on chemicals

  31. Policy Guidelines from Ecological Economics • 1. Daly Rule • 2. Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) • 3. Ecological tariffs on free trade • 4. Community based sustainability through self-sufficiency and diversification

  32. Policy Guidelines from Ecological Economics • 1. Daly Rule: "Never reduce the stock of natural capital below a level that generates a sustained yield unless good substitutes are available for the services generated."

  33. Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare ISEW= total output + unpaid work - environmental destruction and degradation - environmental improvement measures - depreciation of human-made capital +/- welfare distribution effect

  34. Free Trade Limitations • Regional specialization obscures view of resource exploitation, depresses ecological and social laws, weakens terms of trade and impoverishes landholders • Externalities from the shipping of goods around the world • Therefore, tariffs to compensate or reduce free trade

  35. Community Based Development • Community rather than corporations or government creates social conditions (wants and needs) that limit impacts • Greater self-sufficiency through decentralized control • Local synergies for recycling and energy reduction • Ethical bonds amongst business community

  36. Summing up: • Market success in exchange efficiency • Market failures in: valuation, common access, externalities, and discount rate • Environmental economics guidelines: cost effectiveness and market-based incentives • Ecological economics guidelines: limiting growth to within global and local ecosystems *therefore reducing throughput of economy within ecological carrying capacity

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