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Economics & Environmentalism
The principles for guiding the proper stewardship of economic resources apply
equally to the stewardship of natural resources. This section will examine different
perspectives for allocating the scarce resources of the earth. It will emphasize
an economic perspective that serves both the needs of the human person and maintains
the integrity of creation, while safeguarding the moral conditions for an authentic
human ecology.
A strong understanding of economic principles and their impact on the market
structure are fundamental to a proper Environmental Stewardship. A majority
of market systems use a 'cost-benefit' calculation to evaluate a good's sum
cost. Within this 'cost-benefit' structure under the environmental framework,
several differences of opinion emerge. These differences form various segments
of public policy and public life. They have direct impact on market forces and
they can encourage or discourage a strong environmental stewardship. "Coase,
Pigou, and Environmental Rights" simplifies the arguments into two forms. Placing
a perceptive of cooperation and relation between the two-Coase and Pigou-Bruce
Yandle opens a door to a more defined framework.
FEATURED ARTICLE:
“Coase, Pigou, and Environmental Rights”
by Bruce Yandle
This chapter draws on my book, Common Sense and Common Law for the Environment
(see Yandle 1997).
When I was a sophomore in high school, back in 1949, a buddy in my homeroon
had a wonderful after-school job. He worked for the local paper mill located
on a large river that flowed through our town. My friend's job seemed simple
enough, and it paid well. Each day, he sat on the bank of the river near the
mill's discharge point and sampled the river water, dutifully recording the
level of dissolved oxygen and other chemical characteristics.
Consider these facts: The Ocmulgee River was a common-access resource. Discharge
from the mill was potentially harmful to fish as well as to the general ambiance
of that part of middle Georgia, of which there was very little in the immediate
section of the river where the mill was located. Several downstream communities
obtained drinking water from the river, and a large number of farms operated
along the banks of the river. Bear in mind that this was years before the federal
government seriously entered the water pollution control business. At the time,
there were no federal statutes guarding the nation's rivers and streams, and
there were few rigorous state statutes.
Flash back to the time when the mill was being planned. Suppose an economist
was given these facts about the Ocmulgee River and told that a paper mill was
to be sited so that it could discharge oxygen-consuming waste into the river.
Suppose further that the economist was asked to analyze the situation, offer
a policy for siting the mill, and comment on the practical aspects of adopting
the policy proposal as a general rule. Most economists, such as Tom Tietenberg
(1992, 51-69) would consider two primary theoretical approaches for analyzing
the problem. The first approach involves an externality analysis, where the
paper mill pollutes the river, imposing an unwanted cost on society, a cost
that does not enter the mill owners' profit calculations. This is the problem
of social cost.
Following this line of inquiry, failure to consider the external cost leads
to too much paper and too little environmental quality. This economist would
be using an analytical framework developed by A. C. Pigou (1920), a noted British
economist whose works were published in the early twentieth century. Pigou argued
that pollution generates a social cost that should be dealt with by the central
government. He proposed a system of taxes, bounties, and regulations for resolving
the problem. Most likely, the economist using this framework would call for
some form of effluent taxes or regulation to control the mill's discharge.
The second approach likely taken by an economist considers the paper mill
and others who wish to consume or enjoy water quality as part of a competitive
market where people bargain for the use of rights to scarce property. This analysis
has nothing to do with polluters' imposing cost on society, but everything to
do with competing demands for use of an asset. If rights to the asset are defined
and assigned to members of the river-basin community, then those planning to
build the paper mill must bargain with the rightholders to determine just how
much, if any, they will discharge into the river. If the rights are held by
the mill, then the existing communities along the river must bargain with the
mill owner for rights to water quality. Again, bargaining determines the amount
of discharge to the river.
This approach relies on the work of Nobel Laureate Ronald H. Coase (1960),
who established a different way of thinking about the problem of social cost.
Using this framework, an economist might recommend a meeting of the mill owners
and others who have access to the river. After organizing the parties, negotiations
would ensue. If existing river users owned water-quality rights, the mill would
have to buy the rights in order to discharge specified amounts of waste. If
the mill had the right to pollute, existing river users would have to buy water
quality from the mill, paying the mill to limit its discharges.
Having offered two options and moving to make a recommendation, the economist
would consider the practical aspects of the two approaches. Pigou's approach
will likely miss the mark. Information is costly to assemble. It is impossible
to determine the optimal amount of discharge for thousands of industrial dischargers
located along hundreds of rivers and streams, a difficulty Pigou recognized
late in his career. F. A. Hayek describes Pigou's misgivings this way:
Perhaps even more instructive is the case of the late Professor A. C. Pigou,
the founder of the theory of welfare economics-who at the end of a long life
devoted almost entirely to the task of defining the conditions in which government
interference might be used to improve upon the results of the market, had
to concede that the practical value of these theoretical considerations was
somewhat doubtful because we are rarely in a position to ascertain whether
the particular circumstance to which the theory refers exist in fact in any
given situation. Not because he knows so much, but because he knows how much
he would have to know in order to interfere successfully, and because he knows
that he will never know all the relevant circumstances, it would seem that
the economist should refrain from recommending isolated acts of interference
even in conditions in which the theory tells him that they may be sometimes
beneficial.'
What about Coase? While the Coase solution theoretically handles the information
problem, because the parties involved are the decision makers, it can fail because
of transaction costs that emerge if thousands of people along a river are expected
to bargain with multiple dischargers. The pure Pigou and Coase options are difficult
to apply in the real world. This suggests two possibilities: (1) the mill will
locate and do nothing to affect its discharge or (2) the troubled community
will call on government to regulate, hoping that most of the inherent difficulties
will be overcome. Given the options, regulation will take the day. Coase gets
the Nobel Prize and academic recognition for having developed a powerful approach
for analyzing social cost; Pigovians seem to have won the policy battle by default.
We should not be too quick in naming Coase the loser in a contest he did not
enter. He was not developing an environmental policy prescription. Quite the
contrary, Coase explains how an appropriate interpretation of market forces
relying on a rule of law could eliminate the need for specialized statutes for
handling "the problem of social cost," which includes environmental issues.
In doing so, he calls attention to institutions that evolve for reducing the
inevitable costs that are generated in communities. Government regulation is
just one of the many approaches that might be taken. The cost of organizing
and running the various institutions dictates which, if any, approach might
be utilized.
Evidence of the record of Coase's intellectual influence is seen in the count
of citations to his 1960 article, which is shown in figure 5. 1. This shows
the annual count of citations to "The Problem of Social Cost" for the years
1966-1995. Included in the figure are citations to Pigou's The Economics of
Welfare. The citation data are superimposed on a count of Federal Register pages
for the same years. The data mapping suggests several things. First, Pigou's
influence on academics seems to operate at a steady state. There is no evidence
that Pigovians were responding to the growth of regulation occurring around
them. The Coase citations indicate the reverse. References to his ideas seem
to be a reaction to the growth of the regulatory state. There is a systematic
relationship between Coase citations and new pages of federal rules. Coase challenges
command-and-control regulation. Pigou's influence seems to be narrow and focused;
his prescriptions are in harmony with the rise of the regulatory state.
Externalities, Pigou, and Coase: Final Thoughts
This chapter has discussed pollution as a negative externality--unwanted costs
that can be imposed on unwitting parties who have no direct voice in the polluter's
decision. Two very different approaches to the problem have been described.
Pigou's solution spoke of market failure and the need for a central authority
to fine-tune markets so that the appropriate level of pollution would emerge.
This approach called for collection of complicated and rapidly changing information,
translating the information into a tax or regulation, and imposing the tax or
rule on the polluter. This chapter considered some of the problems with this
approach and indicated that in spite of the problems, Pigovian taxes continue
to be debated and used.
Following Pigou, the chapter turned to the Coasean analysis of the same problem.
Instead of speaking of market failure, this analysis looked to markets for the
solution. Where transaction costs are low and property rights are clearly assigned,
the market process can lead to an optimal solution. The Coase solution takes
a decentralized, process approach where parties involved in the problem assemble
their own information and use it in formulating contracts, just as in any other
market. The Coase solution is dynamic. If conditions change, the parties can
revise their agreement in the next contracting period. They do not have to wait
for elections and changes in national statutes.
In its barest form, the Coasean approach seems to fit small numbers cases
where people involved in a problem can transact, an issue discussed by De Alessi
(1998) in this collection. The Pigovian approach seems to fit larger numbers
cases, where there are just too many parties to rely on contracts and trading.
But before jumping to conclusions about the relative merits of the two approaches,
we should recognize that large numbers cases can become smaller numbers when
the large numbers form associations, clubs, or firms, such as river basin associations.
In thinking about Coase versus Pigou, we should also recall the purpose of
Coase's investigation; he wanted to understand a world in which transaction
costs are positive. When we investigate that world, a rich array of quality
assurance devices are observed. Rules of liability and common law rules form
a minor part of that world. Brand name capital, capital market monitoring, concern
for community, and third-party monitoring form a major part. These are evidence
of positive transaction costs that limit direct Coasean bargaining. Among the
world players are governments and other organizations that are immune to the
spur of competition and have no need for quality assurance. It is this part
of the world that Pigou was really addressing. It is government itself that
must be controlled with government regulation.
At first blush, suggesting that government should focus on itself, imposing
command-and-control regulation on government enterprises and leaving the unfettered
forces of the market to deal with private firms and individuals, seems itself
to be a Pigovian prescription. The recommendation implicitly assumes that a
centralized authority managed by wise welfare-maxin-tizing economists will rule
the day. Yet if Public Choice theory has taught anything, it is that government
is endogenous to the political economy. Barring benevolent dictatorships, there
is no ruling authority. Process alone determines outcomes, and it is in analyzing
process that Coase has the advantage over Pigou.
To avoid the Pigovian trap, we must focus on first principles, constitutional
rules that recognize privately arranged property rules of the sort discussed
by Richard Wagner (1998). When the rule of law is accepted by consensus, the
role of government become clear. Government has a constitutional duty to protect
property rights and accordingly to manage its own affairs so the unwanted costs
are not imposed on citizens. When fundamental constitutional protections are
compromised by the politics of expediency, we find ourselves at sea without
an anchor. Instead of pleading for Pigovian solutions that compromise constitutional
property rights protection, we should call for a constitutional order that minimizes
the need for Pigovian approaches and maximizes the domain for Coasean bargaining.
We live our lives in a world formed by statutes and rules. There is tension
between the rule of law and rule by politics. Property rights and the market
process affect and are affected by the political forces as they play through
the larger social system. Political initiatives inspired by purposeful interest
groups encounter the untamed forces of the market where contracts and property
rights dictate outcomes. New institutions for protecting environmental assets
that emerge from the market encounter the raw forces of politics and an entrenched
bureaucracy. Each day, a new world emerges from these encounters. Part of the
outcome we observe is Coasean; another part is Pigovian. Underlying it all is
a system of property rights that continues to evolve. Both Coase and Pigou help
us to understand this evolutionary process that generates an ever-changing definition
of environmental fights.
Notes
1. Hayek (1969, 264). In his discussion, Hayek refers to A. C. Pigou's 1954
article, "Some Aspects of the Welfare State," Diogenes 7: 6.
 
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