Being 6ft 7, I don’t have much leg room on planes.
This was even more apparent on my night flight back from America in 2017,
when the passenger in front of me wanted to recline his chair into a sleeping
position, and I had to apologetically advise that this would not be possible as
my leg room was already at full capacity. Most people would agree that having
this discomfort imposed on me would be unfair to me, and that the passenger in
front of me should save my discomfort, or else compensate me for it. This is
what is known in economics as a ‘negative externality’ - costs imposed on
somebody else that circumvents market signals without due compensation for the
costs.
Pollution is another ‘negative externality’ in society - and one that
many people want to see drastically reduced. To know if we should reduce
pollution, we would need to know what the right amount of pollution is - and
that is a complex analysis that we oversimplify at our peril. Consider a factory that emits sulfer
oxides in the air. Obviously sulfer oxide emissions affect the pollution
levels, but that's not the same as saying that they are bad. Technically,
breathing pollutes the environment, but no one sensible suggests we should stop
breathing. If a factory is turning a profit, it is creating value in society
(because consumers prefer spending on the products to keeping their money), so
the right question to ask is whether the pollution the factory emits has costs
that outweigh the benefits of the consumer surplus the factory affords to
society in total production (not to mention the jobs it creates too) or whether
the benefits of the factory outweigh the cost of the pollution.
How can we
tell which it is? Here's how; if the negative spillover effects of the
pollution are less than the cost of preventing it, the pollution produces more
gains than losses. If the negative spillover effects of the pollution are more
than the cost of preventing it, the pollution probably should be penalised. The point so
many people are missing is that sometimes pollution confers net gains on society (actually,
my instinct is it usually does).
Returning to my night flight, here's an essential part of the story that is usually missed: it wasn’t just the
case that the passenger in front of me was imposing a cost on me if he
reclined, I too was imposing a cost on him by being 6ft 7 and sitting right
behind him. This is what is meant by the notion that negative externalities are
symmetrical. The passenger in front of me was inconvenienced by my height, just
as I was inconvenienced by his desire to recline. And apart from a highly
subjective recourse to Kamm’s Principle of Permissible Harm, which is the
notion that one may endorse some forms of harm occurring but only if such harm
is an effect or an aspect of the greater good itself, there isn’t really a
sound way outside of market signals to established whose inconvenience should
take precedence over the other’s. Naturally, the price system goes a long way
towards solving these problems in advance - for example, by making more
desirable things like seats with more leg room more expensive to match their
increased demand. As my ticket had already been purchased, the way I rectified
the problem was by asking if I could be moved to a seat with more leg room and
no passengers in front of me - and the stewardess was happy to acquiesce,
making all parties happy with the arrangement.
What I'm conveying here is the Coase theorem*, which basically says, we
should never assume that the policy should be "Stop Fred from harming
Bob" or "Stop Bob from harming Fred" - we need to work out
whether we should allow Bob to harm Fred or Fred to harm Bob. Until we know
more details, an abstract argument for preferring Bob over Fred is equally
rational for preferring Fred over Bob - the devil is in the detail. Coase doesn't gainsay the value of carbon
(Pigouvian) taxes per se, but he does teach us that we need to base the
decision on evidence not on logic alone. Should we tax a polluter? Maybe, maybe
not. Pollution causes harm to others, but so does taxation. The proper
cost-benefit analysis is to consider the cost of failing to tax an emission (more
pollution), against the cost of taxing an emission (the stuff we forgo because
of the tax), and try to ascertain which is the bigger net cost.
To ensure a
balanced enquiry, if I was steelmanning here, and trying to find the best
argument for carbon taxes, this 5 point argument is about as good a case as I
can make:
1) The main
defining problem of climate change is that we are all part of the problem as
well as part of the solution. We all rely on vehicles that clog up the road for
others, pollute the air, and put the price of fuel up. We also use our central
heating, wash our clothes and buy things that came from widespread
transportation. Many of us even use aircraft to fly abroad, and run businesses
that emit lots of carbon. The upshot is, we all contribute to greenhouse gas
emissions, so what's needed is a collective effort to change things.
2) This kind
of activity has indirect consequences for people who live near rainforests, people
in hot countries, and it may well even have consequences for people who haven't
been born yet. Even though both the problem and the solution is a shared one,
it is difficult to get everyone to co-operate in shared solutions, which is
where the state comes in.
3) The state
imposes price increases on our transactions in the shape of carbon taxes, which
incentivises us to be self-interested in being more responsible with our
environmental activities. One problem I have with carbon tax is that due to
lots of asymmetry of information the setting of a carbon tax rate is almost
entirely arbitrary. Still, despite this, carbon tax might do some good for the
following reason. People change their bad consumption behaviour to accord with
differing incentives like price changes. So for example, a tax on carbon
dioxide emissions of £50 or £60 a tonne would affect our consumption habits in
relation to products and services associated with carbon dioxide emissions.
4) If this tax
enabled the government to reduce taxes in other areas, then the carbon tax
would help us change our habits and at the same time bring about selection
pressure in the market for us to be more mindful of the environment. This is
part of a general law of economics – when prices go up or down, people change
their buying habits. If the price of red grapes goes up by 40% and green grapes
stay the same, people will buy more green grapes and fewer red grapes. If the
price of emitting carbon goes up, people will lower their CO2 emissions, which
will place selection pressure on consumers and on eco-unfriendly businesses.
This means that as carbon/pollution taxes endure, people will look for more
ways to be greener, making us as humans more mindful of our environment.
5) The conclusion
is that green taxes will do some good to bring about a phasing out of
environmentally unfriendly activities.
Are they
strong enough arguments to justify carbon taxes? My instincts tell me no - so
let's explore those instincts more fully. The problem with carbon taxes in the
present day is that if carbon taxes won't really do any overall good, they are
probably a waste of time altogether. This may not seem obvious at first, but it
should soon be fairly obvious when elucidated. In life, partial efforts are
often good, particularly if the results are not impeded by others'
non-involvement. Giving to charity is a case in point. If 30% of UK folk donate
to Save The Children, then poor children still benefit because despite 70% not
giving to that charity (some may be giving elsewhere) what they do collect
still helps. Similarly if 90% of the country picks up litter then their efforts
are not wasted simply because the other 10% did not. In the cases of charitable
donations and litter picking, every little bit helps - and despite being simple
on the surface, this is measured with rigorous economics (basically, if the
Pareto efficiency or Kaldor-Hicks efficiencies are such that negative
externalities are immeasurable or inconsequential to the positives then every
little really does help).
But when it
comes to reducing your own carbon footprint, things are different - because
every little bit does not necessarily help - not in net terms. There are two
reasons why this is the case: Firstly, reducing your own emissions is a
solitary effort that probably has no real impact at the global level. Even if 50%
of the UK's citizens made a concerted effort to reduce their carbon footprint,
it would still be a drop in the ocean compared with the triune considerations
of a) overall global consumption, b) the extent to which climates change
outside of human involvement, and c) the comparative advancements of future
generations.
And secondly,
your reduced consumption will be offset by increased consumption elsewhere. As
a hypothetical social experiment, suppose half the UK population were randomly
drawn in a lottery and made to reduce their carbon footprint by 20%, with the
other half free to carry on as normal. Here's what probably would happen. The
reduction in consumption by half the people would reduce aggregate demand for
ecologically unfriendly goods, which would see a drop in their price, which would increase consumption for others. What the 50% will actually be doing
is helping out the other 50% in buying cheaper fossil fuels. Obviously that's
too simplistic because there are global factors to consider, but they do not
affect the truth of the statement that reduced consumption for some will mean
increased consumption for others. If you can't get your head around it, imagine
what would happen to the price of high heeled shoes if half the high-heeled
shoe wearing women in the country stopped wearing them and reverted to flat
shoes instead - the other half of the demographic would buy more pairs because
they'd be getting them a lot cheaper.
Moreover,
because politicians can only bring about the imposition of green taxes on their
own citizens, not those of other countries (the EU aside), the same problem will apply at a
global level - reduced consumption for some countries will mean increased
consumption for those other counties that will be beneficiaries of cheaper
fossil fuels. The cost incurred by those carbon-reducing countries will thus
have a limited payoff in terms of overall global reduction. So it is literally the case that unless the
vast majority of the world’s population are singing from the same ecological
hymn sheet, environmental progress in some areas will be cancelled out by
environmental regress in other areas.
In actual
fact, the dialectic between 'If it makes no overall difference then small
interventions will be too costly' plays out exactly this way with what’s called
a 'cap and trade' policy, where a government issues annual permits that allow
companies to emit the amount of carbon dioxide the cap allows. Companies are
taxed if they exceed the permit’s level of emissions, and if they reduce their
emissions they can trade unused permits to other companies. The rationale being
that as the government lowers the number of permits each year, those permits
become more expensive, incentivising companies over the years to invest in
clean technology.
Alas, whoever
devised this scheme isn’t very far-reaching when it comes to economics.
Firstly, like every other state-fixed regulation, the government is bound to
get the limit wrong, as it has no clue how much carbon businesses should emit.
If their cap is too high it will do little good, and will probably even create
an anchoring effect that artificially raises emissions. If the cap is too low
it will destroy businesses and artificially raise energy prices to the
detriment of the industry and consumers. Secondly, it can disadvantage small
businesses who can’t afford to buy a permit, and stifle competition too.
Thirdly, (for complex reasons we won’t elaborate on in this blog post) it is
easier to calculate carbon tax based on per tonne emissions than it is
calculating the optimum number of cap and trade permits.
Here's
something else a lot of people get wrong about carbon tax - it is frequently
assumed to be a method of reducing pollution, but that's not quite right. Even
if there are conditions under which a carbon tax is not as bad as a cap and
trade policy, a carbon tax is not a means of reducing emissions down to a nominal
figure; it is supposed to be a tool for maximising utility. That is, carbon
taxes help us incorporate negative externalities into the price system of a free
market whereby polluters carry the costs of their negative externalities, but
also whereby the price reaches equilibrium as the costs of pollution are
measured accurately against the benefits. That way, those negative
externalities are compensated for by the fact that they increase utility to a
level greater than their costs. For example, a timber factory and a roadside
diner on the outskirts of a city add some pollution to the environment, but
they make up for those negative externalities by providing goods and services
that people want.
Where they could be
a benefit is when carbon taxes intervene in the price system to ensure that
future costs of transactions are thought to be worth paying for present
benefits. The rate of carbon tax is roughly commensurate with the future cost
of pollution, incorporated into the price system to justify the benefits now –
it should technically be a tax that attempts to ascertain the benefits of
pollution, not the costs. Carbon taxes are far from simply being about lowering
emissions, although they will likely change future behaviour as businesses
innovate to be greener with improved technology.
Two other big problems with carbon taxes
The first problem
is the way carbon taxes are used by politicians to make the state bigger at our
expense and for their own gain. Here we can elicit a popular term coined by
Bruce Yandle called Bootleggers and Baptists, which is about regulations that
provide self-interested benefits for both the regulators and for those thought
to be victims of the regulations. It is based on the notion that Baptists
support Sunday closing hours, but so do Bootleggers, because if local bars and
off-licenses are closed, Bootleggers gain too. Here's how it works. Sunday
closing hours benefit both Bootleggers and Baptists, while at the same time
purporting to serve the public interests - and the green regulations are of a
similar nature, as well as being very short-sighted and hugely damaging.
Climate change alarmists naturally support heavy green regulations - because it
furthers their own agenda, and enables them to cream off crony capitalist
subsidies - but so do some of the biggest polluters too because some of the
regulations help shut out competition, which a crony capitalist misallocation
of resources.
The second
problem is that carbon tax does not really punish polluting companies very much;
it tends to punish consumers, who are usually the poorest people in society.
When a company is taxed - whether it is carbon tax, corporation tax, or labour
tax (the minimum wage) - the cost of that tax cannot be borne by a company,
because a company is made up of individuals, and only individuals can bear the
cost of taxes. When companies are taxed, the cost either has to be borne by
shareholders (with lower dividends), or employees (with decreased wages), or by
customers (with increased prices of goods or services). Like with corporation
tax and tax on labour, the cost of carbon taxes are primarily borne by
customers or employees to avoid being borne by shareholders, because a company
will always do its best to pass additional tax costs on to employees or
consumers. If the cost of taxes ultimately falls on individuals in the form of
higher prices of consumption and lower wages (or in some cases increased
unemployment) then a carbon tax policy that tries to hurt corporations who
pollute is simply a tax policy that harms the people who are most struggling to
get by. You may still support carbon taxes on the basis that consumers are
contributing to high-pollution goods and services, and that they are paying
their fair share - but it’s a bad argument for saying that carbon taxes make
companies greener, because what they mostly do is make poor people poorer.
The right
amount of carbon tax is this and only this: it is a tax that imposes
prohibitive costs on low-utility activities while still allowing for
high-utility activities. The trouble is, due to the complexity and inability to
see into the future with any degree of rigour, the level of utility is hard to
distil, leaving us only with ambiguous probability. The probability estimate is
roughly this; if activity A has significant emissions and few offsetting
benefits to make it a low-utility activity then carbon taxes on it could be
encouraged. If not, carbon taxes should be discouraged. If activity B has
significant emission but enough offsetting benefits to make it a high-utility
activity then carbon taxes on it should be discouraged. Where the future costs
outweigh the present benefits we should make the activity price prohibitive.
Where the present benefits outweigh future costs we should make the activity
price conducive. If under a system of high or maximum utility we can't go on to
produce an alternative to our carbon taxing system then we know we are doing
the best and most practical things; if we can go on to produce a better, higher
utility alternative, all the better.
Let me give
you a simple illustration to show this: take cars. Either the future technology
will or won't turn our car industry from a high emissions petrol/diesel
generated industry to a low emissions electric/solar powered industry. All the
evidence thus far suggests that it will (there are electric car prototypes in
place, even as we speak). Give it a few decades and there'll probably be very
few if any petrol or diesel driven cars. So, then, using our utility
measurement above, the right kinds of car will be produced in the future if
it's efficient to do so - and this will happen irrespective of whether the state
influences the market or not. It's true that carbon taxes swing the incentive
towards more environmentally friendly industries, but as I've shown, that
doesn't mean it's a good thing. Taxes on foreign charity may well swing more
donations towards the British Heart Foundation, but that doesn't mean this
swing is a good thing either.
Here's an
example of how not to undertake this analysis. In October 2018, many MPs wanted
to ban all of the standard petrol or diesel driven cars by 2040 and allow only
vanishingly low emission vehicles on the roads (presumably electric and solar
vehicles). A simple understanding of the cost-benefit analysis above would show
that such a ban is irresponsible and unnecessary. Here's why. If the present
benefits of petrol or diesel driven cars outweigh future costs, we should carry
on supporting them, and taxes imposed upon them are more harmful than good. If
on the other hand future costs of petrol or diesel driven cars outweigh present
benefits then taxes imposed upon them are still more good than harmful.
Translated in terms of what the future will hold, what we are saying is: if
future technology brings about electric or solar vehicles with greater utility
than petrol or diesel vehicles then we'll see a natural switch driven by
voluntary market choices, rendering the ban entirely unnecessary. But equally,
if future technology brings about electric or solar vehicles with less utility
than petrol or diesel ones then we won't see a natural switch driven by
voluntary market choices, which means that banning such vehicles (or even
heavily taxing them) will make us all much worse off. Either way, a ban is a
foolish thing to impose.
Closing thought
The upshot of
all this is that when the state intervenes to mitigate the extent to which
humans pollute, the intervention will only be beneficial if it outweighs the
costs of intervention - and my instinct is, it usually does not. With carbon
tax, politicians are trying to prevent future damage by minimising present
benefits. But if present and future benefits of pollution outweigh present and future
costs - and it seems pretty certain that they do (by a long way) - we should
carry on enjoying them, and taxes and regulations imposed upon industrial
activity are more harmful than good. This is what is meant by maximising
utility - net benefits outweigh net costs. Greens believe that things like
carbon taxes maximise utility. Sceptics like myself believe that carbon taxes impede
utility - and I have never had a reason to change my mind.
The scientific
and technological capabilities we have acquired in the past few hundred years will
almost certainly make a better job of tackling externalities than carbon taxes,
especially if humans are given the freedom to cooperate in problem-solving. Our
science, technology and market activity are already making huge differences,
and they are the progression trinity that will ultimately bring about the future
changes needed. The entire nexus of the global economy is a physical system
which is all the time tending towards the principle of maximum efficiency. Although
carbon taxes bring in revenue for politicians short-term (for a few decades
maybe), the long-term indicators are that the market left to run by itself will
naturally make us greener anyway. The reason being: businesses are already
looking for the most efficient means of supplying customers using as little
energy as possible, because in a highly competitive market it is in their
interest to do so to remain profitable. The goal to reduce energy output has
already come in various ways: replacement of human energy for machines,
replacement of metal-based technology for higher intensity resources or
carbon-cased materials, replacement of paper for digital devices, and so forth
– and these are improvements in production that naturally improve business’s
cost-effectiveness.
The transition
from the paper revolution to the digital one required lots of burning of fossil
fuels, equivalent to energy being driven into the system from outside, but all
the time that external energy is helping the global economy tend towards a path
to least resistance very similar to how thermodynamics operates in the natural
world. As the old saying goes, you can't make an omelette without breaking a
few eggs - and the eggs we've cracked since the Industrial Revolution, while
not without some externalities, have done more to improve global standards of
living than anything else in human history. Carbon taxes may lead to fewer emissions, but with carbon taxes, energy prices rise, resources are misallocated, innovation is impeded (including innovation that actually helps solve climate change), and many of the world's poorest people suffer as a consequence.
My instinct is
that because prices have been changed to account for the increased emissions,
the only investment that is needed is investment that is more economically
viable than the current prices. The imminent effect of those price changes will
tell us the best course of action. If, for example, our ability to augment our
solar capacity enables that venture to be price competitive against our current
carbon industries then consumers will respond to it. If it doesn't, they won't
(that point alone illustrates how state interference will probably impede the
process). The costs (present and future) of staying with our current carbon
trends have already been factored into the increased prices of our
externalities. We don't need to throw much taxpayers' money at it at all - because
people's preferences for economic viability will drive this, as already happens
in virtually every other market process. Consequently, compared with how the
market engenders continually increased efficiency, I'm pretty sure that carbon
taxes probably will turn out to have had only a much more negligible effect on
lower energy output and more efficient use of resources than the free market,
because the market is driven by efficiency far more than politicians with
political interest. If there is a race to make us greener, politicians are more
like the tortoise and the market is more like the hare.
* Externalities
are based on incentives, as was most famously written about by English
economist Arthur Cecil Pigou with his standard textbook examples of nineteenth
century trains that threw off sparks that frequently ignited the crops on
neighbouring farms, and of rabbits that would frequently eat the neighbouring
lettuce farmers’ goods. Quite naturally, or so Pigou (and just about everyone
else) thought, the railroad owners and farmers with rabbits had to feel the
effects of their actions, so recompense was owed to the farmers with the
ignited crops and the diminished lettuce supplies. But things aren’t quite so
straightforward, because outside of economic expertise, most negative
externalities are only narrowly considered from one person’s perspective and
not the other. It’s here we need to elicit the Coase theorem – which was
conceived by Nobel Prize winner Ronald Coase in 1960. The idea behind the Coase
theorem is that negative externalities are not usually asymmetrically
one-sided, they are symmetrical. This is what
Ronald Coase theorised:
"Where there are complete
competitive markets with no transactions costs, an efficient set of inputs and
outputs to and from production-optimal distribution will be selected,
regardless of how property rights are divided."
In other words, the Coase theorem asserts that when
rights are involved, parties naturally gravitate towards the most efficient and
mutually beneficial outcome, with no prior blame or discrimination being
automatically assumed. This dramatically changes the situations above, because
Coase was smart enough to enquire as to why the railroad owners and farmers
with rabbits were the ones causing inconvenience – why not the farmers with the
ignited crops and the diminished lettuce supplies? If your trains set fire to
my crops, then you have imposed a cost on me, but at the same time I have
imposed a cost on you by having my crops near your railroad (which may be in
the optimal location for transporting commuters from A to B). Moreover, I may
very well use the train myself. Your rabbits are annoying me by eating my
lettuce; but equally my lettuce is annoying you because it is causing your
rabbits to eat them, which incurs the cost you are forced to pay me as compensation.
Your nearby power plant burns fossil fuels and pollutes the air I breathe, but
you shouldn’t bear all the pollution costs because you supply electricity to
many of the places whose products I buy.
Remember, Coase wasn't looking to play the blame
game; he was looking for an efficient set of inputs and outputs, regardless of
how property rights are divided. In the case of the railroad and the fires, he
was looking for a solution that benefits both, not who should reimburse who. If
the farmer plants his crops at an optimal distance from the railtrack, then
both may enjoy the most efficient outcome. The town has crops and train
journeys, and no one is paying financial restitution or looking for ways to
sue. Similarly the rabbit farmer can keep his rabbits in cages or secure
ring-fences, the lettuce farmer could grow other things the rabbits won’t eat,
or they could split the costs and build an impenetrable fence between their
farms. The railroad/crops example showed a new way of looking at the situation;
yes, if there were no railroad tracks there would be no crop fires, but equally
if there were no crops that were so close to the tracks there would be no crop
fires either.
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