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Show explanationExplain Environmental Economics

Environmental economics

This article is licensed under theGNU Free Documentation License.It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Environmental economics" (click for full Wikipedia text)

 'Environmental economics ' is a subfield of economics concerned with environmental issues (other usages of the term are not uncommon). In using standard methods of neo-classical economics, it is distinguished from green economics or ecological economics which include the nonstandard approaches to natural environment problems, environmental science/environmental studies, or ecology. Quoting from the National Bureau of Economic Research Environmental Economics program: :... Environmental Economics ... undertakes theoretical or empirical studies of the economic effects of national or local environmental policies around the world .... Particular issues include the costs and benefits of alternative environmental policies to deal with air pollution, water quality, toxic substances, solid waste, and global warming. A related field (or possibly alternative approach to the same field) is ecological economics, which takes as its premise that economics is itself a strict subfield of ecology.

Topics and concepts

Central to environmental economics is the concept of an externality. This means that some effects of an activity are not taken into account in its price. For instance, pollution in excess of the socially "optimal" level may occur if the prices a producer pays do not include the impacts (costs) experienced by those adversely affected. One frequently-noted example of an externality is Garrett Hardin's Tragedy of the Commons, which occurs in connection to public good (goods that are "Non-excludable good" and "Rivalrous" - that is, they are open to all). Visitors to an open-access recreational area will use the resource more than if they had to pay for it, leading to environmental degradation. This of course assumes that there is no other policy instrument (e.g. permits, regulation) being used to control access. In economic terminology, these are examples of market failures, and that is an outcome which is not Pareto efficiency in an economic sense. Here the inefficiency is caused because too much of the polluting activity will be carried out, as the polluter will not take the interests of those adversely affected by the pollution into account. This has led to controversial research into measuring well-being which tries to measure when pollution is actually starting to affect human health and general quality of life.

Solutions

Solutions advocated to correct such externalities include:

Alternative approaches to environmental economics

All of the above are advocated by the specific theory of Natural Capitalism (Hawken, Lovins, Lovins). The book goes further by envisioning a world where natural services are considered on par with Capital_(economics). Another context in which Externality apply is when globalization permits one player in a market who is unconcerned with biodiversity to undercut prices of another who is - creating a "race to the bottom" in regulations and conservation. This in turn may cause loss of natural capital with consequent erosion, water purity problems, diseases, desertification, and another outcome which is not Pareto efficiency in an economic sense. This concern is related to the subfield of sustainable development and its political relation, the anti-globalization movement. Environmental economics was once distinct from resource economics but is now hard to distinguish as a separate field as the two became associated with sustainability and more radical green economists split off to work on an alternate political economy. Environmental economics was a major influence for the theories of natural capitalism and environmental finance, which could be said to be two sub-branches of environmental economics concerned with resource conservation in production, and the value of biodiversity to humans, respectively. The more radical Green economists reject neoclassical economics in favour of a new political economy beyond capitalism or communism that gives a greater emphasis to the interaction of the human economy and the natural environment, acknowledging that "economy is three-fifths of ecology" - Mike Nickerson. These more radical approaches would imply changes to money supply and likely also a bioregional democracy so that political, economic, and ecological "environmental limits" were all aligned, and not subject to the arbitrage normally possible under capitalism. Accordingly, there is still a need for a more conservative environmental economics, and its subfields environmental finance, Natural Capitalism, measuring well-being and sustainable development.

See also

Prominent Environmental Economic Hypotheses and Theorems

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The Environmental Remediation QED site has been constructed to provide information on Environmental Remediation services and data. The site presents Environmental Remediation broken down into a number of categories for your convenience, you can also use the search facility located at the top left of the screen to find exactly what you want. The current category is Environmental Economics .

 
 
 
 
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