Night Strike wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:It's the correction of a distortion. In an optimal market, people pay the true price of a product, considering all of the benefits and harms it brings. The cost of health concerns, global warming damage, and traffic congestion is not adequately represented in the price a person pays for, say, gasoline. As a result, the market does not work optimally here. Nor, in general, will it ever in the presence of a negative externality associated with the product. Taxation can, in principle, bring the price up to the level at which those external harms cost society (this is called internalizing the externality) so that demand is appropriately lessened for the product. The point here is that even a completely unregulated market cannot achieve optimality in the presence of an externality -- this is economics 101. If the government can successfully reach that higher price though taxation, and return the revenues to taxpayers so that they are not unduly hurt, it will unquestionably have improved the workings of the market, because people will now be paying the correct price for the product.
This is standard economic theory, and you're calling bunk the work of some pretty respected economists. A much more sensible route to go here, if you don't like the carbon tax, is to take the route of TGD and BBS and argue that we won't get the ideal performance out of government. At which point, we could then start a conversation about whether the inefficiency of using government is outweighed by the harms of global warming, and the likelihood that the market will correct this problem itself; this is the debate I was having with BBS.
Keynesian economists are "pretty respected" (some like Krugman even win Nobels) yet their work is clearly bunk, so I don't see how that characterization is an issue.
Well then I'm at a loss. If you don't trust liberal economists and you don't trust conservative economists, where exactly are you getting your economic picture from?
So the answer to a perceived distortion in the market is a guaranteed distortion to the market?
It is not perceived, if by that you mean subjective. Objectively, the price people pay for fossil fuels (outside of taxes) cannot account for any harms it does to the environment or any harms it does to other people, because neither the seller nor the buyer is directly paying for those harms as a result of the transaction (only indirectly, through tax dollars for disaster relief, traffic regulation, etc.). So yes, it is most certainly the case that if you want a market to return to optimality (in the sense that the price paid for the product is equal the true price), then you need to meet the market distortion with a price change that is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.
And if the government taxes one area then gives that money (minus government's waste) right back to the buyer, then what's the point of having the tax in the first place? Let people keep their own money.
The point is that it encourages consumers to demand alternative energy sources. That is, one way to look at it is that everyone is getting a free check from the government under this law. If you choose to continue consuming fossil fuels, then you more or less break even. But, if you switch to solar power, then you're
saving money, so more people will do it. The classical lesson of economics is that if the price rises on a product, less people will want it. You encourage people to change their consumption habits not by telling them what to do (cf. Prohibition), but by raising the price and letting them make the choice. Now, I could understand your objection if there was not an obvious externality involved. For example, increased soda taxes would definitely encourage people to drink less soda, which is a good thing for society, but it's on less firm ground because unless you appeal to indirect public health costs, you're appealing to a subjective social norm about whether we should be doing something about obesity. However, the externalities associated with increased fuel usage are clear. Besides the damage we're doing to our own cities and towns, more drivers means more traffic congestion, which results in increased health problems and increased number of traffic accidents. People lose productivity because they're late to work, etc. This is a cost that is borne by all of us, and other people are decreasing my quality of life when they purchase gasoline -- this is what an externality really means. So since all I'm really asking is that people pay the correct price for the product, incorporating all the negative harms they do to others when they purchase it. If people then still insist on paying the higher price for the fossil fuels, they are free to do so. But it also allows people the freedom to spend their money on competing energy sources that are not as harmful to society collectively, which they currently cannot do because the price for fossil fuels is artificially low (because of this externality, and also because of government subsidy directly to the oil, coal and natural gas industries).