Friday, February 11, 2011

Bauman, the Stand-up Economist, Updated


(Edited 2/2/2011) Yoram Bauman, the stand-up economist, is a funny man and a good economist, and apparently, that is not an oxymoron.  Watch his new video for two reasons.  First, Bauman humorously explains Mankiw’s ten principles of economics, and second, he gives an example of an external cost and why markets cannot solve the problem.  The standard solutions are a tax on the good producing the pollutant or a cap-and-trade system.  He then pushes a carbon tax as a replacement to some part of the current tax system such as the corporate tax or the payroll tax. 

I am skeptical about some results that climate scientist reach.  Data may be corrupted by the urban heat island effect.  Proxies used to estimate past temperatures beyond fifty years do not seem to be statistically robust.  I also believe that the opportunity cost of alternative energy is well above the $.30 per gallon tax he seems to support, meaning that the cost of solving the problem is greater than the cost of the problem.  Finally, I doubt that unilateral action by the United States would significantly reduce global carbon emissions; it is a global emissions problem without a global enforcement mechanism.  With all my doubts, I still favor a carbon tax as a substitute to some other portion of our tax code.  It is a better, meaning less distorting tax.

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