Economics of the Environment Flashcards
Key idea?
Economics stresses the importance of incentives in shaping people’s behaviour in relation to scarce resources.
Therefore, economic approaches to environmental policy focus on the rules and incentives shaping the allocation and use of scarce (natural)resources
What is resource scarcity?
Resource scarcity is not natural. It emerges when human demand exceeds natural supply.
How does resource allocation fail?
Decisions around resource allocation fail to account for full costs of extraction and usage.
Existing policies are based around principles of fairness rather than efficiency and sustainability.
What are the assumptions of markets?
Markets enable the most efficient allocation of resources. Assumes:
- Market is competitive.
- Good information about quality of goods, enables interchangeable goods.
- All costs/benefits are born by market participants
X - UNTRUE: externalities (+ve/-ve unaccounted for)
How do markets fail?
- Externalities
An externality results when the actions of one individual have a direct, unintentional and uncompensated effect on the well-being of other individuals, or the profits of other firms (Baumol and Oates 1988) - Public Goods
Shared by all, owned by no one
Non-rival (indivisible), non-excludable
Free-rider problem (as a positive externality) - Common pool resources
Difficult to exclude,
Rivalrous
e.g. Fish stocks.
What is in the policy tool-kit?
Command-and-Control
- govt. regulation
e. .g closure of coal plants
vs.
Pricing pollution
- taxes
- permits and property rights
e. g. cap and trade scheme
However, economic policies depend on strong governance and regulation. Therefore a combination of economic and government tools e.g. cap and trade scheme.
What is Tragedy of the Commons?
Overconsumption and collapse of a common pool resource.
- lacks dialogue as people are acting in their own self-interest and not communicating.
Concept of sustainable yield and exceeding it leading to risk of stock collapse.
State involvement enables collective action and management of individual consumptions.
How do institutions vary from organisations?
Institutions (rules of the game) distinct from individuals (players) and organizations (teams) that play the game.
(North, 1990).
What are the policy options for water allocation?
- State.
Centralised coercion through command-and-control, e.g. hydraulic society.
2.Market.
Privatise through tradable water rights, but water is a ‘slippery property right’ with multiple uses.
- Self governance.
Self-imposition of rules
What does self-governance involve?
Clearly defined boundaries Congruence between appropriation and provision rules and local conditions Collective choice arrangements Monitoring Graduated sanctions Conflict resolution mechanisms Minimal recognition of rights to organise Nested enterprises
What does scaling up and out involve?
Requires thinking about collective action and the role of enterprise.
In globalised world, managing resources on local scale is insufficient. Need to nest local efforts into national strategies.
E.g. cities contribution to national efforts to reach global accords.