BigBallinStalin wrote:I still enjoy TGD's main point about blaming consumers--for failing to account for the long-term costs of their decisions. That does comprise a market failure--in the sense that people are not properly accounting for the full social cost (whatever that means in real words/numbers) when buying or selling something.
However, within the market, you actually see a response to this problem. Businesses going green and are being rewarded by consumers for such behavior. You see the rise in graywater systems and permaculture, and through markets (i.e. all the materials used in marketing) many 'green' environmental groups have encouraged a less pollution-reliant lifestyle. (Note: permaculture would boom as a businesses if governments stopped the price controls, thus abundance and waste, of water).
So, in this sense, there's a market success as well, which people all too often neglect. Another aspect which many neglect are the negative consequences of state intervention within the market place. People are so wont to blame markets for problems fundamentally caused by governments.
And consumers failing to account for the long-term costs of their individual decisions absolutely is why the market will fail in such situations.
The number of reasons that consumers make bad decisions is the exact reason why a government must be there to protect them from some, that will never be good decisions.
Using lead paint while cheaper will always be a poor decision. Companies would absolutely sell lead paint, and consumers absolutely would buy it use it and there would be a massive cost.
Individually, consumers cannot possibly have enough time to research all the pros and cons of every product. They cannot possibly have time or the resources to research the safety or lack thereof of every product.
Its the same with asbestos. The corporations that mined and produced it absolutely spent millions trying to continue to sell it to customers that couldnt possibly know the actual safety hazzards. Years went by, and in a large part because government officials were corrupted, and instead of making the correct choice of banning it immediately, which in the long run would absolutely have been cheaper than the negative health effects and cleanup. The promise of current profits, and the risk of reduced profits means the market absolutely pushed forward with a substance that absolutely killed people needlessly, and still costs money today.
Thats what a free market will always do. It will ignore death and future costs, in favor of current profits and rewards because the people who reap the profits and rewards, are very often not the ones that pay the costs, or the deaths.
Cigarrettes are a perfect example of how the market will never solve the problem. The majority people that bribed and corrupted the government largely never saw the consequences of their selling of cancer sticks. And many that still do will similarly never see any consequences. The market actually may benefit from the use of cancersticks, because dollars are generated, jobs are generated, retirements of those who do not contribute to the market any more are generated, the doctors have jobs, the pharmaceutical companies create drugs. It is a perfect market in many ways. In a very real economic way, it should continue if not be increased.
The only reason there is any problem is that it ends lives, creates suffering, and in a very real way, only because the majority of its users started an an early age, when market decisions if not all decisions were hardly made with all of the information available to them.
The number examples is countless.
Your denial of them is tragic, and your inability to apply them to climate change is ignorant, naive, if not completely stupid, because you actually have all the information at your disposal, but choose to ignore it and create a fantasy land based on anything but actual history or the actual reality in which we live.
You are living in a fantasy land believing in the power of the free market to solve all problems, especially those that are not economic in nature.
It is the very nature of a free market that requires a governing body to draw the line when economic objectives, are vastly outweighed for the good of society, or in this case, very likely, humanity itself.
Seriously, grow up.