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Sam Weaver's avatar

Great piece and a clear argument to frame policy to regulate directly for the outcomes you want. In this case it's not so much the easy access to means to do physical work that is a problem (cheap energy), it the often-attendant emissions of GHG gases that is. Thus the correct economic solution is an escalating carbon tax, and that solution is mostly a non-starter politically in many regimes. So arises the pragmatic need to 'incentivize' low-carbon energy - it's the other economic approach that is less efficient (because it economically indirect) but politically possible. The analogy in housing politics is that a direct land value tax would most clearly state political values through economics, but such tax increases are heavy political lifts. Inclusionary zoning levies 'seem' fair to voters, and are assessed on the parties seen to profit from each individual increase in development density. So though economically inefficient in many ways, inclusionary zoning requirements and commercial linkage fees clear the political hurdles necessary (in some US cities) to partially fund social housing programs. I found that working in public policy required tending to political realities as if they were as material as economics or engineering, which can be quite frustrating. Changing what is possible politically often has much longer time-frames than the immediacy of a community's needs.

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Owen C's avatar

Interesting discussion, but isn’t it true that per capita consumption of fossil fuel resources has been declining over time? That would seem to suggest that as population growth slows in places like China then overall consumption of fossil fuels will rise. Obviously Africa is still growing briskly, but they seem to be a smaller overall consumer of resources.

Also, you say “technology won’t reduce our use of materials” but what about dematerialised technology growth? I’m thinking specifically about work from home becoming much more popular. Do you think that is a form of technology that could decrease overall resource consumption?

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