freediver wrote on May 12
th, 2007 at 3:22pm:
No, I am talking about the same environmental outcome. The only difference is the economic cost.
Again, read the report, environmental outcome is better when using tanks. Or is this another 'why should I read your supporting evidence when it doesn't back up my argument' classic weak freediver position
Quote:This is a disagreement over subsidies, not tanks. The article you linked to was abut tanks vs dams and desal.
This is why you don't get it, this is not a disagreement over subsidies, the government will continue to subsidise, you are an idealistic quack if you think otherwise, this is an argument about where the government's money should be spent. Either way, your idea requires that government build on current infrastructure spending tax dollars, my idea involves government spending tax dollars to put the infrastructure in private hands. No difference if it's a subsidy or a public works project.
You seem to think however that reduced consumption alone will save us. Poor analysis of the situation freediver.
Quote:They can, but they don't because the relative costs have all changed.
But that is irrelevant! When you have more money at your disposal, relatively higher costs are meaningless.
Quote:You keep saying they are inelastic, but you haven't demonstrated it. They are highly elastic. Who care's if it doesn't change overnight? The economy won't suffer because of it. In fact it is by allowing the economy to respond at it's own pace that a green tax shift avoids a lot of the cost to the economy which is inherent in subsidies. Subsidies don't change things overnight either you realise? If you try to change things quickly with a subsidy, you just push up prices and there isn't any more of whatever you are subsidising produced. The subsidy has no effect except increased profits to those who are already making the item. Whatever rate of change you can achieve with a subsidy, you could achieve it faster and at less cost to the economy with a green tax shift.
Demand for water is inelastic because people need to drink a certain amount, wash their clothes and use the toilet. Without changing the technology used to do these things you won't change the quantity that is used by a great deal. Demand for water by industry is inelastic because technology used in production and other outputs requires certain amounts of water, this wont change without changing the technology used. Demand for fuel is inelastic because people have to drive the same k's every week to get to work and pick up the kids from school, businesses need to truck goods around the country, again this is the technology of the automobile and the system of distribution networks we have, you won't change demand without changing the technology. Demand for power is again inelastic because people use a certain amount of power to get household tasks done, businesses use a certain amount of power to get their jobs done. Without a change in technology this cannot change by any meaningful amount. Technology does not change in the short term, so in the short term if you raise costs, the economy slows down while businesses re-tool and households catch up, that is if technology even exists to make the necessary savings.
A subsidy does not change things overnight, but it changes things at reduced cost to business and in the case that I am putting forth, households.
Quote:It doesn't have to change overnight. Business won't take a dive. Remember your analysis above? People can go on spending money on the same things. This includes the cost of taxes that businesses pass on to end consumers. If everyone continued doing exactly the same thing after the tax shift, no-one would go out of business. They would buy the same products, just at different relative prices.
Exactly my point, a tax shift results in nothing. A price hike alone which will achieve something will hurt the economy.
Quote:That doesn't ease the transition. That makes it harder.
The introduction of most new important service providing technologies has been subsidised by government throughout our entire history... because it HELPS the transition.
Quote:They don't. You disagree with me. You took some statements from economists about a different question and pretended that it was a response to this issue. The economists are strongly on my side on the subsidy vs green tax shift debate.
It is a response to the issue, tanks are superior technology for the environment, government is in a position where it is forced to invest in water, savings or no, they must invest, tanks are a better way to spend funds than dams. I gave you a link to a study by a group of economists that is pushing the case for increased tanks subsidies... exactly how does that support your position?