1 / 7

GEOG 352: Day 25

GEOG 352: Day 25. More Presentations. Housekeeping Items. Reminder about the fair tax forum on Thursday evening ( see folder )

lavender
Download Presentation

GEOG 352: Day 25

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. GEOG 352: Day 25 More Presentations

  2. Housekeeping Items • Reminder about the fairtax forum on Thursday evening (seefolder) • GEOG 324 students are presentingtheirresearch on various aspects of climate change on Friday from 12:30 to 3:30 in 243. As many extra people as can fit are welcome! • Linda went to a film and workshop on co-ops at the Duncan campus on the weekend. Maybeshecouldbriefly tell us about it. • Todaypresentersinclude Cody, MJ, Jim, Linda, and John. Anyonehaving trouble sending me their PPT? • If we have time, wewillstart in on Chapter 21.

  3. Chapter 21 of Daly and Farley • A constant themethroughout the book isthatmarkets have manystrengths, but optimizingaccess to non-marketgoods (equity, environmentalhealth) is not one of them • The authors, using a non-deterministicand non-nihilistperspective, argue that are real alternatives to the status quo, and thatsome conditions are betterthanothers. • Within the context of three macro-goals (scale, justdistri-bution, and allocativeefficiency), theyoffer six design principles for a steady-state economy: -eachpolicy goal needsitsown instruments to optimize (eventhoughtheycan serve more than one goal, theycan’toptimize more than one) [seefootnote p. 414];

  4. Design Principles for Policy Instruments • -one shouldachieve macro-levelcontrolwith minimal sacrifice of micro-levelfreedomandvariability(for instance, as with per capita CO2emissions); leave a margin of errorwhendealingwith the biosphysicalenvironment (‘precautionaryprinciple’) and in thiswayalsoavoiddraconian discipline; -startfromwherewe are (a policy of resolutegradualism); -adaptpolicies to changing conditions, both in the external world and in the state of ourknowledge (metaphor of a sailboat); - implementsubsidiarity (develop and implementpolicyat the appropriatelevel – e.g. solidwaste as a municipal responsibility vs. climate change as a global issue).

  5. Chapter 21 • How canwemakethesepolicyprinciples a bit more concrete? • While the marketis good atdeliveringefficiciency (one of the three macro-goals), itis not good atdeliveringappropriatescale or just distribution, each of whichisalso a condition, ultimately ,for efficiency. • For instance, having a market for CO2 or SO2maybe the most efficient way of gettingresults in terms of reducingemissions, but without a scaledecision as to an optimal level of emission, and withoutdecidingwho has the right to emit and who the atmospherebelongs to, one cannot have a properemissionsmarket.

  6. Design Principles for Policy Instruments • As theymakeclearthroughout the book, the three macro-goals are not of equal importance. They rate them: scalejust distribution allocation • Theyrecommend in most cases startingwithinflows, not outflows, thoughthisis not a hard and fastrule. For instance, itiseasier to prevent pollution beforeitiscreatedthanat the end of the pipe. Also: sources are generallyowned and sinksare not, the latter thusbeing harder to regulate (rememberopen accesssystems?) • Theyrecommendagainst setting quantityandpriceat the same time; theyprefer setting quantities (i.e. quotas). • Limitscanbe set on extraction on privatelyowned…

  7. Design Principles for Policy Instruments • …sources and potentiallyalso on outflows to sources. Whatevertheirpropertystatus, these are aspects of natural capital that affect all of us. • The source vs. sink issue illustrates the dilemma of addressingconflictingprinciples – itis more efficient to tacklethings at the source end, but this islessincrementalthantacklingthings at the sink end. • One cantaxeither inputs or outputs, but itisbetter to do soat the depletion (source) end, as thiscanbeused to adjustprices. • As time permits, wewill continue with Ch. 21, and go on to 22-24.

More Related