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Government
In today’s New York Times, Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman preens about intellectual dishonesty while presenting the most intellectually dishonest case about the cost of climate change policies I have seen this side of Joe Romm. It moved me to do something I have not done for some time, and Fisk the entire article. Krugman’s words are in italics.
So, have you enjoyed the debate over health care reform? Have you been impressed by the civility of the discussion and the intellectual honesty of reform opponents?
If so, you’ll love the next big debate: the fight over climate change.
And Mr Krugman is about to demonstrate his level of civility and intellectual honesty in what only can be described as a pre-emptive strike. Is this the Krugman Doctrine?
The House has already passed a fairly strong cap-and-trade climate bill, the Waxman-Markey act, which if it becomes law would eventually lead to sharp reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
Sharp reductions? The Breakthrough Institute, which strongly champions action on global warming, says that the way the bill is structured “U.S. emissions in capped sectors could rise for much–if not all–of the next two decades.” Krugman protects himself against the accusation of outright lies by using the word “eventually,” but without disclosing the ineffectiveness of the bill over the next 20 years, Krugman is already being intellectually dishonest.
But on climate change, as on health care, the sticking point will be the Senate. And the usual suspects are doing their best to prevent action.
Some of them still claim that there’s no such thing as global warming, or at least that the evidence isn’t yet conclusive. But that argument is wearing thin – as thin as the Arctic pack ice, which has now diminished to the point that shipping companies are opening up new routes through the formerly impassable seas north of Siberia.
Krugman condenses a very complex argument over the nature of global warming into one statement and then dismisses it out of hand. There are very few who deny the heat-trapping properties of greenhouse gases. There are many who suggest that the influence of these gases on the climate as a whole has been significantly exaggerated. For instance, I wonder what Mr. Krugman thinks of the recent research of Lindzen and Choi, published in August, which uses actual observations to find that climate sensitivity to greenhouse gases has been overestimated by a factor of six.
As for the Arctic, it has been melting since the end of the Little Ice Age two hundred years ago. In fact, The Washington Post published a story on a government report that described “a radical change in climatic conditions,” “unheard-of temperatures in the Arctic zone,” and the melting of ice as long ago as November 2, 1922. The fact that the North-East Passage, a holy grail for traders for hundreds of years, is now open might also warrant some balancing mention of its benefits.
Even corporations are losing patience with the deniers: earlier this week Pacific Gas and Electric canceled its membership in the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in protest over the chamber’s “disingenuous attempts to diminish or distort the reality” of climate change.
PG&E made an odd member of the Chamber of Commerce to begin with, as its profits come about not by commerce but by government regulation. PG&E’s profits are “decoupled” from the amount of energy it sells. There are suggestions, by the way, that companies are coming under pressure in the way of threats of activism directed against them if they continue to support the Chamber’s efforts to protect the interests of its members.
So the main argument against climate action probably won’t be the claim that global warming is a myth. It will, instead, be the argument that doing anything to limit global warming would destroy the economy. As the blog Climate Progress puts it, opponents of climate change legislation “keep raising their estimated cost of the clean energy and global warming pollution reduction programs like some out of control auctioneer.”
If the estimated costs rise, that is because people like the bloggers at Climate Progress keep persuading politicians to go for more ambitious programs, which of course cost more. Auctioneers only respond to bids, and it is the bidders who are out of control.
It’s important, then, to understand that claims of immense economic damage from climate legislation are as bogus, in their own way, as climate-change denial. Saving the planet won’t come free (although the early stages of conservation actually might). But it won’t cost all that much either.
Here we are getting to the nub. Having succeeded in chilling the speech of those who are doubtful about the effect of greenhouse gases on the climate, Mr. Krugman now wants to make it unacceptable to say that policies designed to raise the cost of energy will have any detriment to the economy.
How do we know this? First, the evidence suggests that we’re wasting a lot of energy right now. That is, we’re burning large amounts of coal, oil and gas in ways that don’t actually enhance our standard of living – a phenomenon known in the research literature as the “energy-efficiency gap.” The existence of this gap suggests that policies promoting energy conservation could, up to a point, actually make consumers richer.
Well of course there is waste involved in generating energy. If there wasn’t so much regulation of energy generation right now, which has the perverse effect of locking in old technology, then we’d actually be a lot more efficient than we are. However, being more energy efficient does not mean we use less energy. Mr. Krugman’s own newspaper just recently published an excellent story about the Jevons Paradox, first formulated in 1865, which states, “It is wholly a confusion of ideas to suppose that the economical use of fuel is equivalent to a diminished consumption. The very contrary is the truth.” This really is Energy 101.
Second, the best available economic analyses suggest that even deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions would impose only modest costs on the average family. Earlier this month, the Congressional Budget Office released an analysis of the effects of Waxman-Markey, concluding that in 2020 the bill would cost the average family only $160 a year, or 0.2 percent of income. That’s roughly the cost of a postage stamp a day.
Once again, Mr. Krugman is being economical with the truth. The government studies most emphatically did not find that the bill will cost a postage stamp a day in 2020. They can only arrive at that figure of $160 a year by discounting twice. They took the nominal cost – the actual out-of-pocket cost – of the increases in energy prices and worked out what that would be in today’s dollars. Then they discounted back to find the present value of that figure. In other words, $160 a year is what you’d have to lock away in a bank account with a guaranteed interest rate today in order to pay your bills in 2020. If you didn’t do that, the figure from the EPA’s study in today’s dollars (ie not accounting for inflation) is above $2700 a year for a family of four. The CBO study, meanwhile, admits that it did not attempt a comprehensive study of lost income.
Mr. Krugman also ignores polling evidence that finds that only 10 percent of respondents would be willing to pay more than $100 a year to achieve the supposed benefits of the Waxman-Markey bill. So even if the cost was just a postage stamp a day, people would still find that cost expensive.
By 2050, when the emissions limit would be much tighter, the burden would rise to 1.2 percent of income. But the budget office also predicts that real G.D.P. will be about two-and-a-half times larger in 2050 than it is today, so that G.D.P. per person will rise by about 80 percent. The cost of climate protection would barely make a dent in that growth. And all of this, of course, ignores the benefits of limiting global warming.
The same argument can be made about global warming itself. Even with all the supposed dramatic effects of global warming, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change finds that people all over the world – even in the poorest countries – will be many times richer than they are today as a result of the economic activity sustained by fossil fuels. This demonstrates that a warmer-but-richer world is better off than a cooler-but-poorer world, and we will in fact be best off in the warmest world. Krugman’s argument here in fact suggests that we shouldn’t do anything about emissions at all.
So where do the apocalyptic warnings about the cost of climate-change policy come from?
Are the opponents of cap-and-trade relying on different studies that reach fundamentally different conclusions? No, not really. It’s true that last spring the Heritage Foundation put out a report claiming that Waxman-Markey would lead to huge job losses, but the study seems to have been so obviously absurd that I’ve hardly seen anyone cite it.
The Heritage Foundation has updated its report and recently defended its methodology in a panel of other modelers, who did not raise significant objections to it (so much for its obvious absurdity). If Mr Krugman hasn’t seen it cited it is the same way that Pauline Kael didn’t know anyone who voted for Nixon. But the Heritage Report is not the only one. The American Council on Capital Formation found job losses of 1.8 to 2.4 million in 2030. The research of the left-leaning Brookings Institution has found that “Achieving reductions in greenhouse gas emissions is a costly endeavor.” Once one strips away the discounting tricks, even the government studies demonstrate the truth of this statement.
Instead, the campaign against saving the planet rests mainly on lies.
Thus, last week Glenn Beck – who seems to be challenging Rush Limbaugh for the role of de facto leader of the G.O.P. – informed his audience of a “buried” Obama administration study showing that Waxman-Markey would actually cost the average family $1,787 per year. Needless to say, no such study exists.
Once again, Mr. Krugman is being economical with the truth. He is correct only in so far as the recently revealed documents simply summarize the real effects of the other studies that have been disguised using economic trickery. Here is what the Treasury documents say will be the effect of the President’s policies:
Given the administration’s proposal to auction all emission allowances …a cap-and-trade program could generate federal receipts on the order of $100 to $200 billion annually. … Economic costs will likely be on the order of 1% of GDP, making them equal in scale to all existing environmental regulation. …One advantage of auctioning allowances is the potential for generating large revenues (perhaps $300 billion annually). … Domestic policies to address climate change and the related issues of energy security and affordability will involve significant costs and potential revenues, possibly up to several percentage points of annual GDP (i.e., equal in size to the corporate income tax).
These documents are available for viewing here. The fact that the Treasury initially redacted the most embarrassing sentences suggests strongly that they wanted to hide this. That sounds like burying the truth to me.
But we shouldn’t be too hard on Mr. Beck. Similar – and similarly false – claims about the cost of Waxman-Markey have been circulated by many supposed experts.
The claims are the claims of the US Treasury Department, available now for all to see. We show, while Mr. Krugman tells.
A year ago I would have been shocked by this behavior. But as we’ve already seen in the health care debate, the polarization of our political discourse has forced self-proclaimed “centrists” to choose sides – and many of them have apparently decided that partisan opposition to President Obama trumps any concerns about intellectual honesty.
So here’s the bottom line: The claim that climate legislation will kill the economy deserves the same disdain as the claim that global warming is a hoax. The truth about the economics of climate change is that it’s relatively easy being green.
Mr. Krugman is hoist by his own petard.
Regina Herzlinger, chair of Harvard Business School, in National Review takes on health care and the Obama Administration’s arguments that a government-run plan would increase competition, provide more choice, and lead to greater cost efficiencies:
But before we get swept away, let us remember that these health-insurance markets would be monopolies run by government, two characteristics that normally do not enhance consumer welfare. Picture the efficiency of your Division of Motor Vehicles, for example.
Also consider government-run monopoly liquor stores. Despite their ability as the single payer to extract better volume discounts from wholesalers than private liquor chains can, their prices are not lower than private stores’. Additionally, they slight consumers through shorter operating hours, inconvenient locations, limited brand availability, and inadequate advertising. By forcing consumers to adjust their shopping habits, they raise prices through loss of time. Although some advocates hope that these features limit liquor consumption, this is not the case.
The results attained by government-run health-insurance markets in Massachusetts and the Netherlands provide equally cautionary evidence: Such markets limit competition, do not control costs, discourage entrepreneurial efforts, and thus cause consumer dissatisfaction.
Congressional Democrats are pushing hard to complete their health care bill before next week’s recess, but their hopes for a quick passage and the fulfilling of Obama’s goal of signing by October look increasingly bleak–especially since the drafting was done without Republican input, leading, of course, to a political firestorm. The bill would mandate health insurance coverage for all Americans at enormous taxpayer expense and require major employer contributions, though there is not yet full agreement on the specifics of the burdens that will ultimately be imposed on employers. All that is clear so far is that these burdens will be massive.
The objectives of this bill ostensibly are to provide insurance coverage for the 46 million Americans who still lack it (though apparently not all of those uninsured are actually American citizens) and lower health care costs. However, it likely will accomplish neither. First of all, the plan won’t end up covering all the uninsured even when fully implemented, according to a preliminary assessment by the Congressional Budget Office. It would leave as many as 36 million people still without coverage–truly pathetic, given the hyped ambitions of the plan.
Second, a new study published by the Pacific Research Institute points out that Medicare costs have actually grown much more than those of private health care, and that’s not even accounting for the additional costs imposed through the taxation that supports it and the distortion of the market that occurs as a necessary result of Medicare’s very existence. This is particularly important (and ironic) because what sparked this health care debate in the first place was the huge rise in health care costs over the last 40 years. So, in short, this government health care plan fails on its own terms.
To someone who believes in both the competence and goodwill of our government, this makes absolutely no sense. Congress has been shown by its own budget experts, among many others, that this plan will cause an explosion of the already astronomical federal budget deficit, and that despite its massive spending, still will fail to insure most of the people it targets. To make matters worse, this public health care program itself is by nature far less efficient than its private sector counterparts, so massive amounts of money will inevitably be wasted. That provokes the question: Why go through with this at all? To answer, one must set aside the premise that this initiative is about insuring the helpless against financial catastrophe due to injury and illness. This initiative is not about helping people. It’s about control. The more people become dependent on taxpayer-subsidized, (eventually) monopolized health care, the more voters there are who have a vital incentive to cast their ballots in favor of bigger government.
“Health care reform” is an issue today only because the political establishment has managed to pin all the blame for soaring costs on the private sector, despite the corresponding increase in cumbersome regulation over the years. When this measure fails, as even the CBO assures it will, the blame will fall yet again on the private sector–or what’s left of it.
Steve Forbes in the Washington Times today has a very nice tribute to CEI on its 25th Anniversary. Forbes points out some of CEI’s significant achievements in pursuit of freedom and against expanding government and the real need for CEI and other free market groups to continue their strong defense of these principles.
Here’s his conclusion:
Groups like CEI are a crucial voice for entrepreneurs and all people who want to pursue their own destiny in life. That must seem like a lonely struggle at times, when businesses actively seek favors from Washington and the people place false hopes in Big Government.
Yet CEI remains hard at work, laying the groundwork for a free society. When faced with the choice between freedom and statism, I hope we will find CEI’s call to freedom loud and enduring.
If you’re a fan of professional print journalism, you may be a little worried as of late. Denver’s Rocky Mountain News just closed its doors after nearly 150 years in the news game. Meanwhile the San Francisco Chronicle and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer are both on life support. Even the New York Times, the largest newspaper in America, has cut its dividend and mortgaged its headquarters for $225 million.
It seems clear that the age of broadsheet newspapers is coming to an end, yet the web hasn’t come to its rescue. Partially this is because ad rates from the old world of print were inflated to reflect the size of the total audience of the paper. Online ads, by contrast, are micro-targeted at just those folks who advertisers believe are most likely to buy their products or services. This makes sense, but the numbers involved are still staggering.
Consider that the New York Times online as of 2007 had about 13 million unique users. Compare that to its weekday circulation of 1.1 million and its weekend circulation of about 1.6 million. The Grey Lady’s web presence had tenfold the reach of the paper, yet online revenue made up only about 10% of the Times total revenue. That means that a product with ten times the reach is getting only 1/10th of its old-school equivalent.
Long story short: the industry needs all the help it can get.
This is where Google comes in. Along with being a giant in the search industry, Google is empowering a network of publishers to the tune of $4.2 billion in revenue passed to them in 2007—according to members of Google’s DC office, the 2008 numbers are even larger. In fact, Google knows it is better to give than to receive—it gives more money out to its publisher network than it keeps for itself in profits.
Now this giant of monetization is introducing an even better advertising mechanism, Google’s “Interest Based Advertising” program. IBA works by collecting information whenever a user visits a site that features a Google AdSense network ad. This information is turned into a sort of a profile that helps to focus ads on a per-user basis, rather than just basing that ad on the content of the web page alone.
This means that advertisers will have a more effective means of getting their message out online—news that should be music to the faltering print news industry’s ears, not to mention their loyal readers.
Understandably, this news sounds ominous to many. Tracking your browsing? And we were worried about the Bush administration tapping our phones!
However, unlike when dealing with government looky lous, you have the choice to tell Google to mind their own business. Also, Google is telling consumers about the program. Folks concerned with privacy issues call these elements “notice” and “choice.”
The notice comes in the form of clear labels on all Google-based ads, something the company already does with the exception of some of their print ads. Currently, all ads served by Google feature their name, but some don’t feature the name of company paying for the ad spot. Now that will change. Users will know that Google is serving the ad and who’s paying them to do so.
Additionally, Google is allowing users to choose—this is the control part—how they’re classified by the new program. Their Ads Preferences Manager will let users view, delete, or add interest categories associated with their browser so that the advertising they see will at least be relevant to them.
Finally, Google is also giving consumers the ultimate control over the program in the form of a set of tools to permanently opt-out. They have even designed plug-ins for browsers that will maintain your opt-out choice.
It remains to be seen how this program—and others started much earlier by Yahoo! and other Google competitors—will increase revenues for publishers. However, since all of these systems are designed to serve more relevant ads to consumers, it would seem that all parties involved stand to benefit.
Yet, there is sometimes no satisfying the privacy alarmists. The AP relayed this comment from EPIC’s Marc Rotenberg:
“This is a very serious development,” said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. “I don’t think the world’s largest search engine should be in the business of profiling people.”
Yet, with all Google is doing to allow users to opt-out of this system, one wonders if Mr. Rosenberg and those who share his opinion believe there should be any innovation whatsoever in online advertising, or if the industry should simply come to a stand-still.
Criticism of Google’s plan seems especially dubious given the alternatives offered. Mr. Rotenberg believes that the FTC should reexamine Google’s merger with DoubleClick. Translation: consumers are too dumb to manage their privacy, so the FTC should do it for them by tearing apart business deals that are deemed unsavory.
The appropriate level of privacy in our lives can’t be set by the government. It can only be set by free people able to explore the full range of choices offered in the marketplace. When you consider not only Google’s consumer-friendly ad program, but other products like pre-paid cell phones, nameless debit accounts, proxy servers, anonymous email accounts, and the like, privacy seems to be out there for those who want it.
The best advice for those who want privacy: don’t go online. The Internet is the modern public square, no more a private retreat than is a public park. Technologies can help to mask your identity, but ultimately much can be found out about who you are online. The only thing stopping that now is the free market’s respect for contracts and the choices of consumers. Attacking that very freedom to choose is no way to secure great privacy in the future.
Regardless of your political party or ideological leanings, the notion of the federal government spending $2 trillion, adding to the national debt of nearly $11 trillion already, should make you stop and consider the staggering size of our national tab.
If the irony of using debt-based spending to solve a problem caused by debt-based spending has escaped you, perhaps these fun facts will put things into perspective:
- If you spent $1 every second, you’d have to keep spending for 412,000 years to get to $13 trillion. That means you’d have to start shortly after the time human beings first starting using stone tools and fire to get to $13 trillion today.
- $13 trillion in one dollar bills weighs 28 million pounds. That’s as much as 87 blue whales or 462 Statues of Liberty.
- If you laid 13 trillion one-dollar bills end-to-end they’d reach from the earth to the sun and back…five times over. That’s 946 million miles of greenbacks.
The amount we’re looking at now—roughly $2 trillion between the Secretary Geithner’s new bank bailout plan and President Obama’s stimulus package—isn’t small potatoes either. So what is $2 trillion?
- $2 trillion is bigger than the entire Gross Domestic Product of our neighbor to the north, Canada. In fact, according to the IMF, only Japan, Germany, China, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy have bigger total economies than the combined bailout/stimulus plan—all other countries on Earth have economies smaller than $2 trillion per year.
Then there’s the interest on this staggering debt, which isn’t exactly small. Paying the interest on the current $10.7 trillion debt cost Americans $451.1 billion last year alone. How big is that?
- That’s $1478 dollars in interest for every man, woman, and child in the United States.
- That’s bigger than the annual budgets of New York ($121.1 billion), California ($111.1 billion) and Texas ($83.8 billion) combined.
If you’re scared, upset, or disgusted by this, you can do something. Visit BeyondBailouts.org and tell your Congressman and the President what you think of the bank bailout and stimulus.
You can also click on the “ShareThis” button at the top of this post to forward these fun facts to your friends or share them on your favorite social network.
Correction: I originally listed the state budget of Texas as $167 billion, but that figure was not annual. Texas budgets for two years at a time, so the figure has been cut in half.
The Yahoo-Google ad deal looks like it’s dead. The deal announced in June, would have allowed Google ads to appear on Yahoo search results. Yahoo estimated an $800 million profit during the frist year of the Google ad partnership and would have allowed Yahoo to continue its transion from search to content provider, making it a much more competitive company.
What has likely killed the deal? As stated in a Reuters article:
The two Internet companies have so far failed to reach an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice on implementing their search advertising partnership.
Why doesn’t the DoJ approve the non-exclusive agreement? Becuase of concerns over competition, that this will reduce competition in the internet marketplace. Anyone following Yahoo, however, knows that Yahoo is becoming less and less competitive as a search provider, but it’s attempts to become more competitive and focus on providing content, something it is much better at than google, are being stymied by government regulation.
Major newspapers around the country including the