Hot issue
Given its costs, global warming can now be thought of as an economic tax on the middle class. A recent NOAA report found that 56 percent of the continental U.S. is currently experiencing drought. Exaggerated by global warming, enhanced drought is reducing America’s corn crop and sending the futures price for corn soaring by 34 percent over the last four weeks. This will generate a painful new economic tax on a middle class whose food supply is largely tied to corn as an ingredient and as animal feed. “Let them eat cake” is not an answer either as this drought has similarly damaged the U.S. wheat crop. To put this damage in perspective, consider that France is now positioned to exceed the U.S. in wheat exports.
Global Warming’s economic tax on consumer electric bills
An economic tax is now hitting the middle class as they open their electric bills following the recent heat wave. The middle class had to crank up their air conditioners to preserve their health and work performance during the recent extreme heat and humidity and will suffer higher electricity bills as a result. There is even a multiplier effect where the global warming’s induced extreme heat and humidity reduces the operating efficiency of air conditioning equipment that further increases consumers’ electricity demand and electric bills.
Other “unsustainability” taxes on the middle class:
Global warming is just one symptom of the “unsustainability” of the 20th century’s economic system. The industrial scale use of antibiotics is a good example: 80 percent of antibiotics designed to improve human health are now actually used to mass-breed animals on an industrial scale to achieve least-cost-unit production. While this system is delivering 99¢ meals, it is also endangering the long-term health of consumers. A just-released report in Emerging Infectious Diseases, a publication of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, reported 85 percent of urinary tract infections impacting more than 8 million American women are linked to antibiotic use in chicken manufacturing. The telling quote in this research article is:
The economic benefit of feeding antibiotics to chickens from egg to execution is a lower-priced supply of meat. The unintended cost consequences are human suffering and an economic tax placed on the middle class in the form of higher health care premiums.
Poor, unsustainable product design adds to the economic tax. Plastic bags, those infernal packages wrapped in impregnable plastic, styrofoam take-out containers and all our e-waste in the form of obsolete computers, printers and phones are tossed by consumers without economic consequences to the manufacturer. The natural economic ramifications are product designs where the cost of disposal/recycling is accounted for as “regulatory compliance.” In this type of economic system even a heavily regulated “green” state like California dumps 123,000 tons of plastic bags annually into landfills. But disposal and recycling is not free so in our current system this cost falls on the middle class through higher garbage collection fees, municipal taxes, bond issues to fund additional landfills and income taxes to pay for the massive growth in state and federal environmental regulation. And on top of all this is the environmental damage of the trash.
China’s global warming economic tax on the American middle class
In a free enterprise system businesses and consumers typically respond to economic signals like those being delivered by global warming and unsustainability before a political system can align around consensus actions. That is exactly what is happening today in the United States. Since 2006, the U.S. has jumped to world leadership in reducing CO2 emissions. In 2011, the U.S. reduced CO2 emissions by 2 percent as utilities shifted from higher emissions “clean coal” to lower emissions natural gas, as car companies introduced and consumers bought more fuel efficient technologies and the vast majority of businesses implement building/manufacturing efficiencies. While it is hugely encouraging that the U.S. is producing business leaders pioneering sustainable products, the sobering reality is that the United States is still the world’s second largest emitter of CO2.










Comments
What wonderfully lucid arguements and facts.
There needs to be another term created other than calling these "taxes". They are policy and market (and weather (aurguably caused by policy and market decisions)) caused costs. "Tax" implies that the government (us) bennefits. That is not the case, most of the time, with these costs.
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