ECO 481: Public Choice Theory Lecture #10: Coercive Redistribution Environmental Goods Dr. Dennis Foster.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
15 CHAPTER Externalities.
Advertisements

15 EXTERNALITIES CHAPTER.
PART 10 Market Failures Markets may fail to generate efficient results due to Monopoly Externalities Public Goods Open Access Markets may also have informational.
Chapter 11 Environmental Regulation of the Energy Industry.
10 Externalities.
Externalities.
Principles of Microeconomics, Prof. Maclachlan, Spring Externalities, Public Goods and Common Resources Chapters 10, 11.
I don’t care about you F*** you! - Guns N’ Roses
Externalities © 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted.
Efficiency and Non-Market Forces Going ga-ga about markets –Review of Market EfficiencyMarket Efficiency Government’s Role in Economic EfficiencyGovernment’s.
Externalities Consumption Externalities Production Externalities.
1 Circular Flow. 2 Technical efficiency: maximum value of output from a resource base Economic efficiency: when one person cannot be made better off without.
© 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien, 2e. Fernando & Yvonn Quijano Prepared by: Chapter 5 Externalities,
When the market works as it should…
Externalities and Public Policy
Environmental Economics Market & Policy Failures Harvard Summer School June 29, 2011.
Lecture 3 Tuesday, September 9 THE MARKET: HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK.
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Environmental Economics.
Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities. Copyright © 2004 South-Western EXTERNALITIES AND MARKET INEFFICIENCY An externality refers to the uncompensated.
Chapter Externalities 10. Externalities Externality – The uncompensated impact of one person’s actions on the well-being of a bystander – Market failure.
Market Failure Solutions A review of various approaches to address imperfections of the free market system.
Property Rights Set of rights to engage in specific activities
Public goods and externalities: two more “market failures” another market failure (discussed in the previous lecture) is due to “monopoly power” these.
Five c h a p t e r © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien—1 st ed. Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn.
Externalities.
Negative Externalities Where the Free Market Needs Help.
© 2006 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited. All rights reserved.1 Chapter 14: Market Failures and Government Policy Prepared by: Kevin Richter, Douglas College.
Dr. D. Foster Microeconomics Market Failure (?): Public Goods, Common Property & Externalities.
Chapter 2: The United States Economy CAPITALIST IDEOLOGY FREEDOM OF ENTERPRISE & CHOICE PRIVATE PROPERTY ROLE OF SELF-INTEREST COMPETITION.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 The Economics of Environmental Protection.
Economic Systems and Goals SRVHS Economics. Fundamental Problem  Scarcity: Unlimited needs and wants, limited resources   Choices  Efficiency: minimizing.
Chapter 15: Externalities, Public Goods and Social Choice
Lecture 3 Tuesday, September 11 THE MARKET: HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK.
Across the country, countless people have protested, even risking arrest, against the Keystone XL Pipeline. (Credit: modification of image by “NoKXL”/Flickr.
ECO 481: Public Choice Theory The Rationale for Government Dr. Dennis Foster.
14-1 Economics: Theory Through Applications This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported.
Market Failure Chapter 14 Externalities. Economic Freedom Economic freedom refers to the degree to which private individuals are able to carry out voluntary.
Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Chapter 10 Externalities. Market Failure Market failure is when the free market does not provide the best outcome for society. Monopoly is a form of market.
1 CH2_Part II. 2 Externalities as a Source of Market Failure Exclusivity is one of the chief characteristics of an efficient property rights structure.
Chapter 5 Economic Policy.  People’s concerns: 1.Prosperity & Economic Growth (how well is economy doing) 2.Distribution of Economic benefits (how wealth.
6. Absence of Property Rights The Coase Theorem Ronald Coase ( ), Nobel Laureate, Ronald H. Coase: On Economics
Externalities Lecture 10 – academic year 2015/16 Introduction to Economics Dimitri Paolini.
Macroeconomics ECON 2302 May 2009 Marilyn Spencer, Ph.D. Professor of Economics Chapter 5.
Externalities: Problems and Solutions
Environmental Policies
What you will learn in this chapter:
Public Choice Mechanisms: Conflicts in Yellowstone
Chapter 10: Negative Externalities and Market Failure
Externalities © 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted.
Efficiency and Equity in a Competitive Market
HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK
ECO 481: Public Choice Theory
10 Externalities.
10 Externalities.
ECO 481: Public Choice Theory
Philosophical Approaches to Undernutrition
Market Failure (?): Public Goods & Common Property
10 Externalities.
Market Failure (?): Externalities
Externalities and Public Policy
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
The neo-liberalism A thought that defenses the free capitalist system appearing in early 1930s and late in 1970s insisting on Private monopoly capitalism.
HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK
10 Externalities.
ECO 481: Public Choice Theory
Incentive Based Strategies: Transferable Discharge Permits
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
ECO 481: Public Choice Theory
Presentation transcript:

ECO 481: Public Choice Theory Lecture #10: Coercive Redistribution Environmental Goods Dr. Dennis Foster

Why is their caring? We expect wealthier to pursue rent-seeking. We have a strong altruistic streak. Especially for those close to us. We give a lot... to civic organizations. Are we just bribing the poor? [Does it even work?] I. Coercive Redistribution

Support for Welfare From bureaucrats. From private suppliers of transfer goods. From “intellectuals.” From politicians – the New Deal & Great Society Complicated programs that garner votes.

What is the solution? Economic growth! Capitalists denigrated “An ideology of equality and entitlement borne of desperate conditions has now taken such hold that even able supporters of effective capitalistic institutions are placed on the defensive.” Keep a low profile!

Equality 53% get some direct benefits (mostly feds). Doesn’t include “public goods!” Leaky bucket of federal redistribution. Est. 66% - 75% doesn’t go to beneficiary. Esp.  $7800 > claimed amt. needed. It’s easy being “politically generous.” So, why doesn’t that “cure” poverty.

Politics & Redistribution Must form coalitions. Results in a lot of unintended indirect transfers. Includes monetary & fiscal policies. Distribution can go sideways or up! “Whenever vast new government programs come into being the consequences are apt to be widespread, consequential, and somewhat unpredictable.”

Politics & Redistribution Generally from poorly organized to well organized. It’s not about the poor! Does “social justice” mean anything other than, “More for me and less for you?” We bias results against what a market would do. “State redistribution is not morally superior to that of markets or private charity.”

The Demand for Amenities Growth in environmental “awareness” in the U.S. in the 1980s. A direct outgrowth of capitalism and rising living standards. --How do we make LDCs environmentally friendly??? Government actions: illusory, costly (>benefits) & worsening. II. Environmental Goods

Optimal level of pollution Market - overproduces. Not on purpose! Reaching efficiency: --Tax = 0T --Mandate = E-s Both can/are likely to be inefficient! Quantity of pollution $ MC-a MC-p E-s $ E-m T 0 Environmental problems must be understood more as failures by gov’t to specify property rights than as offshoots of private profit-seeking.

Inefficient Outcomes Coal & the Clean Air Act (1970, 1977, 1990) Choices: scrubbers, washing, use low-SO2 coal. Mandate on scrubbers benefits introduced permit trading. Did EPA get estimated costs right? Did vested industry get it right? Doesn’t anybody read Hayek?

Selling Pollution Rights Goal: Reduce Pollution by 3 Units How? Cost? Price of permits? Issue 2 each? Cost to reduce by: Firm XFirm YFirm Z 1 st unit$50$70$800 2 nd unit$75$130$ rd unit$100$200$2000

Property Rights Coase – As long as transaction costs are low. Not a market problem --Airspace. --Fish. --Endangered species. --Wild species. GroupOn and solving the free rider problem.

Elephants & Property Rights Elephants in Africa 1970s million 1980s - 600,000

Limitations Transactions costs must be low. Assignment of rights will be contentious. What is optimal level of pollution? It is not a scientific question!! Who will set the tax? Who will be exempt? Do we really want to treat symptoms rather than the source? Information and incentive problems are well-handled by the market and are “at the heart of government mismanagement.”

warming What about global warming? What are we talking about? What is the basis for the alarm? Do the alarmists have a good track record? Why is the debate over if conclusions are model-driven? What is the criteria for being wrong? What’s wrong with the McKitrick tax?

ECO 481: Public Choice Theory Lecture #10: Coercive Redistribution Environmental Goods Dr. Dennis Foster