Liberace and the LIEO try to make it out as everyone's problem.
The West offshored it to the Rest after the renunciation of the Imperial System.
It is a problem originally created by the West, which only the Imperial system might then have put under control, mainly by holding back development in the Rest, not encouraging it.
That is, in fact, the only way to have done so.
Controlling climate change is now just as dead a letter as Western Civilization.
That is, in fact, the only way to have done so.
Controlling climate change is now just as dead a letter as Western Civilization.
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
CLASSIC POST THE VISIBLE HAND
Monday, July 26, 2010
KRUGMAN ON THE ENVIRONMENT: WHY NOT THE VISIBLE HAND?
Looks like a well thot out piece. Good points.
He is even critical of conservatives, critical even on underlying presuppositions of his field, critical of the Casanova hand among the wealthy conservative spin on climategate, critical it seems of the invisible hand solving the problem.
One problem, though, when it comes to a solution, what does he suggest?
Putting in place a carbon credit market regimen by legislation.
But isn't a 'market system', essentially the one he is criticising, what has given us the global warming situation in the first place, for which he now has another market solution?
Hasn't a 'market' in carbon credits already shown its flawed face?
Isn't booming Asia, industrially/environmentally/MILITARILY, our 'invisible' hand, to a great extent, at work? ('At play', really, is a better term, in that it has been too haphazard, childish, naive, whimsical, blithe, a history to be called 'work'.)
What I suggest, and it is not going to work here, is an old tool of government:
police power; the power to say that certain things, or certain polluting activities in certain measures, will not be permitted, on penalty of such and such.
Call it THE VISIBLE HAND.
But that solution has always been anathema to economic thinking.
He is even critical of conservatives, critical even on underlying presuppositions of his field, critical of the Casanova hand among the wealthy conservative spin on climategate, critical it seems of the invisible hand solving the problem.
One problem, though, when it comes to a solution, what does he suggest?
Putting in place a carbon credit market regimen by legislation.
But isn't a 'market system', essentially the one he is criticising, what has given us the global warming situation in the first place, for which he now has another market solution?
Hasn't a 'market' in carbon credits already shown its flawed face?
Isn't booming Asia, industrially/environmentally/MILITARILY, our 'invisible' hand, to a great extent, at work? ('At play', really, is a better term, in that it has been too haphazard, childish, naive, whimsical, blithe, a history to be called 'work'.)
What I suggest, and it is not going to work here, is an old tool of government:
police power; the power to say that certain things, or certain polluting activities in certain measures, will not be permitted, on penalty of such and such.
Call it THE VISIBLE HAND.
But that solution has always been anathema to economic thinking.
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