A Massive Market Failure
By Lester Brown
Earth Policy Institute
December 17, 2008
Plan B 3.0 Book Byte
http://www.earthpolicy.org/Books/Seg/PB3ch01_ss2.htm
When Nicholas Stern, former chief economist
at the World Bank, released his ground-breaking study in late 2006
on the future costs of climate change, he talked about a massive
market failure. He was referring to the failure of the market to
incorporate the climate change costs of burning fossil fuels. The
costs, he said, would be measured in the trillions of dollars. The
difference between the market prices for fossil fuels and the prices
that also incorporate their environmental costs to society are huge.
The roots of our current dilemma lie in the enormous growth of the
human enterprise over the last century. Since 1900, the world
economy has expanded 20-fold and world population has increased
fourfold. Although there were places in 1900 where local demand
exceeded the capacity of natural systems, this was not a global
issue. There was some deforestation, but overpumping of water was
virtually unheard of, overfishing was rare, and carbon emissions
were so low that there was no serious effect on climate. The
indirect costs of these early excesses were negligible.
Now with the economy as large as it is, the indirect costs of
burning coal--the costs of air pollution, acid rain, devastated
ecosystems, and climate change--can exceed the direct costs, those
of mining the coal and transporting it to the power plant. As a
result of neglecting to account for these indirect costs, the market
is undervaluing many goods and services, creating economic
distortions.
As economic decisionmakers--whether consumers, corporate planners,
government policymakers, or investment bankers--we all depend on the
market for information to guide us. In order for markets to work and
economic actors to make sound decisions, the markets must give us
good information, including the full cost of the products we buy.
But the market is giving us bad information, and as a result we are
making bad decisions--so bad that they are threatening civilization.
The market is in many ways an incredible institution. It allocates
resources with an efficiency that no central planning body can match
and it easily balances supply and demand. The market has some
fundamental weaknesses, however. It does not incorporate into prices
the indirect costs of producing goods. It does not value nature’s
services properly. And it does not respect the sustainable yield
thresholds of natural systems. It also favors the near term over the
long term, showing little concern for future generations.
One of the best examples of this massive market failure can be seen
in the United States, where the gasoline pump price in mid 2007 was
$3 per gallon. But this price reflects only the cost of discovering
the oil, pumping it to the surface, refining it into gasoline, and
delivering the gas to service stations. It overlooks the costs of
climate change as well as the costs of tax subsidies to the oil
industry (such as the oil depletion allowance), the burgeoning
military costs of protecting access to oil in the politically
unstable Middle East, and the health care costs for treating
respiratory illnesses from breathing polluted air.
Based on a study by the International Center for Technology
Assessment, these costs now total nearly $12 per gallon ($3.17 per
liter) of gasoline burned in the United States. If these were added
to the $3 cost of the gasoline itself, motorists would pay $15 a
gallon for gas at the pump. In reality, burning gasoline is very
costly, but the market tells us it is cheap, thus grossly distorting
the structure of the economy. The challenge facing governments is to
restructure tax systems by systematically incorporating indirect
costs as a tax to make sure the price of products reflects their
full costs to society and by offsetting this with a reduction in
income taxes.
Another market distortion became abundantly clear in the summer of
1998 when China’s Yangtze River valley, home to nearly 400 million
people, was wracked by some of the worst flooding in history. The
resulting damages of $30 billion exceeded the value of the country’s
annual rice harvest.
After several weeks of flooding, the government in Beijing announced
a ban on tree cutting in the Yangtze River basin. It justified this
by noting that trees standing are worth three times as much as trees
cut: the flood control services provided by forests were far more
valuable than the lumber in the trees. In effect, the market price
was off by a factor of three.
This situation has occasional parallels in the commercial world. In
the late 1990s Enron, a Texas-based energy trading corporation, may
have appeared on the cover of more business magazines than any other
U.S. company. It was spectacularly successful. The darling of Wall
Street, it was the seventh most valuable corporation in the United
States in early 2001. Unfortunately, when independent auditors began
looking closely at Enron in late 2001 they discovered that the
company had been leaving certain costs off the books. When these
were included, Enron was worthless. Its stock, which had traded as
high as $90 a share, was suddenly trading for pennies a share. Enron
was bankrupt. The collapse was complete. It no longer exists.
We are doing today exactly what Enron did. We are leaving costs off
the books, but on a far larger scale. We focus on key economic
indicators like economic growth and the increase in international
trade and investment, and the situation looks good. But if we
incorporate all the indirect costs that the market omits when
setting prices, a very different picture emerges. If we persist in
leaving these costs off the books, we will face the same fate as
Enron.
Today, more than ever before, we need political leaders who can see
the big picture, who understand the relationship between the economy
and its environmental support systems. And since the principal
advisors to government are economists, we need economists who can
think like ecologists. Unfortunately they are rare. Ray Anderson,
founder and chairman of Atlanta-based Interface, a leading world
manufacturer of industrial carpet, is especially critical of
economics as it is taught in many universities: “We continue to
teach economics students to trust the ‘invisible hand’ of the
market, when the invisible hand is clearly blind to the
externalities and treats massive subsidies, such as a war to protect
oil for the oil companies, as if the subsidies were deserved. Can we
really trust a blind invisible hand to allocate resources
rationally?”
Adapted from Chapter 1, “Entering a New World,” in Lester R. Brown, Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2008), available for free downloading and purchase at www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB3/index.htm
