Climate Change and Market Definition of Property Rights
[Cross-posted on the parent blog]
A fellow named Gregory responded to my post, "Can the Free Market Solve the Problems Posed by Climate Change?" with an argument which I think deserves to be discussed in some depth. Gregory wrote:
If
the market has not arrived at an efficient means regulating itself
(compensating those damaged) then a government certainly will not be
able to affect such a regulation efficiently. The cost of the
regulation must be weighed against the benefit it provides. If economic
growth is retarded by inefficient regulations, do we not harm future
generations more than by waiting for the market to develop a mechanism
to efficiently distribute justice?
Gregory
highlights the fact that the market has not yet developed an efficient
way to enforce the property rights involved in discussions of climate
change. I agree that on some level, to indict the free market for this
fact would be problematic. In his essay, "Market-Based Environmentalism
and the Free Market: They're Not the Same," Roy Cordato wrote
...environmental
problems are not an unavoidable side effect of a free-market economy.
Instead, they occur because the institution setting--the property
rights structure--required for the operation of a free market is not
fully in place. Because, in all modern societies, government has taken
nearly complete responsibility for the establishment and maintenance of
this institutional setting, environmental problems are more
appropriately viewed as manifestations of government failure, not
market failure.
Mark Pennington bolsters this view in
his essay, "Liberty, Markets, and Environmental Values: A Hayekian
Defense of Free-Market Environmentalism," when he writes, "Transaction
costs are not the sole preserve of the market system...and we commit
the "nirvana fallacy" if we suggest the alternative to an imperfect
market is a government immune from the same sort of problems."
I
completely agree with these two authors, and Gregory, in saying that
ill-defined and unenforced property rights are at the root of most (if
not all, depending on your definition of "property rights") of the
problems associated with climate change.
Further, I agree that
the free market can solve some of the inadequacies in the process of
enforcing justice, but often only if allowed to work without
interference. Pennington writes:
Although proponents of
free-market environmentalism recognize that environmental markets have
limits owing to the prevalence of transaction costs, they contend that
these problems are more like to be overcome within an institutional
framework supportive of private contractual arrangements. In this
perspective, all
environmental externalities represent potential profit opportunities
for entrepreneurs who can devise ways of defining private-property
rights and arranging contracts (via technological innovations, for
example) so that those currently free riding on collective goods or
imposing negative external effects (for example, water pollution) on
their neighbors are required to bear the full costs of their actions.
That
being said, I do think that we oversimplify if we simply suppose that
the market will find a way to handle the problem in an acceptable
manner, and leave it at that. In issues of justice, the "There are many
ways to skin a cat" approach taken by the free market might not be
acceptable. Improper conceptions of property rights are not simply
inefficient, they are unjust. In his speech, "Another Take on Free
Market Environmentalism: A Friendly Critique," David Roodman
highlighted this idea when he said:
Fine, I own my car.
And you own your lungs. Property rights are allocated, seemingly. So
now can we reach happy agreement about how to resolve the conflict? Fat
chance. More likely, thousands of drivers and breathers will end up
suing each other and then the problem will end up in the lap of the
court, which would have to decide precisely where the right to free
enjoyment of one's car stops and the right to free enjoyment of one's
lungs starts.
Later, he quipped, "Judges did not free the slaves; in fact, they tightened the bondage."
I
don't mean to imply that libertarian judges would be unable to come up
with a decent solution. I'm only suggesting that the answer might not
be as simple as Rothbard made it sound when he wrote, in chapter 13 of
his
Egalitarianism as a Revolt Against Human Nature:
...it
would not be a very difficult task for Libertarian lawyers and jurists
to arrive at a rational and objective code of libertarian legal
principles and procedures based on the axiom of defense of person and
property, and consequently of no coercion to be used against anyone who
is not a proven and convicted invader of such person and property. This
code would then be followed and applied to specific cases by
privately-competitive and free-market courts, all of whom would be
pledged to abide by the code, and who would be employed on the market
proportionately as the quality of their service satisfies the consumers
of their product.
The problem, in addition to the
simple fact that this could be difficult to do, is that this group of
Libertarian lawyers and jurists would need to arrive at decisions
somehow. Either they could do so in accordance with majority opinion or
some other procedural way, or (as I suspect Rothbard is aiming at) they
could do so in accordance with the true principles of justice. If the
former were the case, then I see no reason why we would call the result
"rational and objective." And if the latter, then we should be able to
replicate the activities of these lawyers and jurists on our own. But
as those who have been keeping up with my work have undoubtedly seen,
the task is not quite as simple as Rothbard makes it sound.
One
approach would be to take a somewhat left-libertarian angle and say
that climate change represents injustice due to an over-enclosure of
the atmospheric commons. Edwin Dolan took this approach in his essay,
"Science, Public Policy, and Global Warming: Rethinking the Market
Liberal Perspective." Dolan wrote:
Liberalism in
America, in particular, grew up in a Lockean state of nature where it
was really true, or at least seemed true, that homesteaders, loggers,
grazers, and industrialists could take what they needed while leaving
"enough and as good for others." What the environmentalist side of the
global warming debate is telling us is that we no longer live in such a
world.
Because those responsible for climate change
have, according to Dolan, taken more than their fair share, they must
be subject to the demands of justice. He insists, "Defending the rights
of property that has been unjustly acquired is a conservative position,
not a liberal one."
But this approach has its difficulties. One
problem is the fact that the atmospheric CO2 sink is not really a
limited resource. The problem is not that "...the atmospheric commons -
namely, the Earth's carbon absorbing capacity - are finite and
depletable," as Tariq Banuri and Erika Spanger-Siegfried characterized
it in their essay "Equity and the Clean Development Mechanism: Equity,
Additionality, Supplementarity." As far as we're concerned (though
technically this isn't true), we can dump as much CO2 into the
atmosphere as we want. It's not like one day we'll light a fire and the
CO2 won't go into the atmosphere. The thing that's available in limited
quantities is the atmosphere's capacity to absorb CO2 without causing
any harm.
In light of this fact, the right way to allocate the
resource in question is somewhat unclear. In a world in which we do
exceed the total CO2 emissions we could release without causing
objectionable climate change, what is the real significance of the
amount of CO2 which we could have emitted without causing harm? This, I think, is a problem which reflects the fact that climate change is an emergent problem, and is therefore sort of different from other problems we normally face.
Of
course, even if we figure out the significance of this "harmless sink
capacity," there still remains a boatload of work to do in order to
determine exactly who is responsible for what emissions, what rights
are violated by climate change, whether non-rights-violating actions
can be justly interfered with, what exactly we should hold people
accountable for, who should bear what burdens, what accountability
entails, what our accountabilities to future people are and how they should be enforced, and how we should administer all of this (I'm sure I'm leaving
stuff out). Never mind the scientific uncertainty plaguing every step
of the process.
At the end of the day, we can talk all we want
about the market figuring out the answers to climate change through
incentives for the enforcement of justice, but someone's going to have
to figure this stuff out. If it can be done, hopefully I'll be able to
figure out how, or at least set the process in motion for other people.
I really hope that answers your question somehow!