Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENT
saklviTüal½yCatiRKb;RKg NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF MANAGEMENT karRKb;RKgbriyakasGaCIvkmµ ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS MANAGEMENT CHAPTER VI ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENT PREPARED BY SAY PUNNAREAY, MBA
2
How much is clean air worth
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? What market incentives are there for research on the environment? How can the environment be priced and sold? Does Cambodia have any mechanisms for valuing its environment?
3
What is a market. A system of exchange What is exchanged
What is a market? A system of exchange What is exchanged? Resources: land, labor, capital (goods or services in some form) How does the market work? Matching of supply and demand
4
1. WHAT ENABLES THE MARKET TO WORK?
Price or Value setting Profit motive Private property Government and other regulating institutions
5
General 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?
6
Environmental market failures: - Unprimed use values; option values; existence values; bequest values. - Lack of information - Externalities - Common Access Resources/Sinks - Discounting the future - Missing Markets
7
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
8
Cost effectiveness: example, emission trading credits
3. POLICY GUIDELINES FROM ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS Benefits of Using the Market (as opposed to CAC) Cost effectiveness: example, emission trading credits Substitution and technological advance: example, green taxes. Other institution/market based schemes: deposit refund schemes, environmental bonds, transferable quotas, transfer of development rights.
9
4. BETTER VALUATION OF NON-MARKET VALUED ASSETS
Financial Costs Averting Behavior Travel Cost Method Hedonic Pricing Contingent Evaluation For: Better Cost-Benefit Analysis, regulations, fines
10
5. POLICY GUIDELINES FROM ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
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." Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) Ecological tariffs on free trade Community based sustainability through self-sufficiency and diversification
11
6. 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
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.