|
The Legacy of Milton and Rose
Friedman’s Free to Choose
Economic Liberalism at the Turn of the 21st Century
October 23–24,
2003
A Conference Hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Session 2 Q&A
Q: Both of you have had considerable
experience in the trenches, arguing for free market
environmental alternatives. What do you think is the
primary source of the hostility to the idea? Do you
think it’s theoretical, ideological, or theological?
A: [Terry Anderson] I’ll
take theological. And when I say theological, I guess
I would make sure that it is understood by that the
notion that there is a right and is a wrong. If we look
at different uses of public lands, or uses of water,
you name the resource, the notion is there that somehow
my wanting to use a piece of land for one purpose (let’s
say something I like to do or am passionate about, like
hunting) is not necessarily something that’s accepted
by people who say that is a bad unequivocally. It’s
bad because it’s bad not necessarily for themselves
but for the environment. So the argument goes, and I
find that a very effective tool used by many people
in the environmental debate. That is, I don’t
want this stuff just for me, I want it for the environment,
I want it for nature and therefore I am not being selfish
and indeed I am willing to sacrifice some to get this
better environment. And I think that’s very much
a theological kind of debate that exists. I have taken
out of my remarks the simple point that most economists
focus on these issues by saying it’s a question
of competing uses for scarce resources. The question
then becomes what processes will sort out those competing
uses. But if your belief is that this is not a matter
of competing uses, it’s a matter of impacting
this thing called the environment versus using it for
your own self interest, then you win the debate on that
theological note.
A2: [Richard Stroup] I have a
couple of answers. One is simply the fact that environmental
problems are taught as market failure. The assumption
is that property rights make people more selfish. I
think precisely the opposite is true, and I think we
can probably demonstrate that. But with people who care
most about a clean, healthy, and attractive environment,
I think it’s a problem not understanding what
markets are about. At the second level, I think there
is sort of a theological problem. A friend of mine says,
to criticize superfund as being inefficient and ineffective
is a little bit like criticizing holy communion on grounds
of nutrition. It’s not about nutrition, you see,
it’s about, in the case of cleaning up the environment,
to some folks, it’s about contrition. I think
that’s a tiny minority of the people out there,
but they are a vocal, intellectual minority with a strong
voice. I think, frankly, we need to separate them. We
need to drive a wedge between them, on the one hand,
who are going to be very difficult to deal with. I don’t
know how quite to deal with them, but I don’t
think there’s very many of them either. If the
people who are true environmentalists, who want a clean,
healthy, and safe environment, come to realize that
these other folks are working against their interest,
I think that the support for these intellectual types
is going to shrink dramatically.
Q: There have been many questions
regarding the future of wetlands. With the impending
destruction of wetlands, how do states, or the United
States government, I guess, form policies that can successfully
prevent further destruction but still allow for development?
A: [Stroup] I supervised a small
PERC project by a fellow who had been a lawyer and was
now going back for his Ph.D. in natural resources. He
looked at the 404 program or the Army Corps of Engineers,
which has to do with preservation of wetlands, and what
he found was two interesting things. One is that when
the Corps was deciding what lands were wetlands for
purposes of being under their jurisdiction? There was
no evidence that they paid any attention whatever to
the criteria of wetlands, except for the court deciding
the minimal legal definition, which typically meant
certain kinds of plants had to grow there or something
of that sort. Now, the same people in the same offices,
when they’re deciding which acres can be used,
which acres can be applied to mitigation so that well,
okay, you can develop these acres, wetlands, if you
replace them with twice as many acres over here with
certain functions. Now that very same agency, the very
same folks, are paying very strong attention to the
criteria for wetlands; the functions that they perform.
If we can just somehow hold these people accountable
for delivering results and quantifying the results they
deliver, not the acres, but rather the environmental
results, the criteria, the functions, then I think the
program will be much more efficiently run and much more
realistically funded.
A2: [Anderson] If I can just add
to that, picking up on this point of accountability.
As I mentioned, the person at PERC held up his paper
and said, “It is about property rights.”
That’s what these issues are about. If these are
valuable outputs to be produced from wetlands, then
with property rights, markets can effectively produce
those. A favorite example of mine is an organization
called Delta Water Fowl, which was interested in wetlands,
as you can guess, because wetlands produced water fowl.
They developed a program called adopt a pot hole, a
program whereby duck hunters could actually adopt wetlands
in Canada in the Prairie Provinces that produce ducks.
When you adopt your pot hole, not only do you get a
certificate saying you’ve done good, but you get
a report on a quarterly basis of the number of ducks
being produced and the other kinds of species that might
be there. Needless to say, that’s holding people
accountable, and the people who purchase those things
don’t purchase them if they don’t get what
they want. But the property rights are clear. These
are properties that belong to farmers, and the duck
hunters want the results. So again it’s a question
of trying to think of property right mechanisms that
can make this happen, rather than simply waving our
hands and accepting that it’s market failure,
as Rick said.
Q: To what extent are positive environmental
outcomes the result of more environmental laws and regulations,
whether they take the command and control approach of
the EPA or a more market-based approach? And secondly,
are extractive industries like mining more prone to
pollute?
A: [Anderson] Well, I’ll
start on the first point about environmental quality
resulting from legislation. It’s very instructive
to look at what was happening to all measures of air
quality and water quality prior to the passage of the
Clean Water Act and Clean Air Act. The trends in all
cases were downward and downward, that is, improved
quality so less pollutants into these two media. The
pollutants were falling dramatically prior to the Clear
Air and Clean Water Acts. After the passage of both
those acts, the slope changes quite dramatically and
flattens out. In other words, we’ve gotten less
increase in environmental quality on those two measures
since the passage of those two acts than we were getting
prior to that. Now, you can question why we were getting
the improvements, and some of them were coming about
because of local communities and states passing laws
that had some impact. And you could argue that we were
picking the low-hanging fruit, namely the easy ones
to get, so you would expect us for any dollar spent
to get a lot more improvement than we would later on.
I think both these arguments hold some sway in the debate,
but in addition to that, prior to the passage of the
Clean Air and the Clean Water Acts, it’s quite
clear that the common law was doing a great deal to
resolve these problems. And we need to understand again,
related to Rick’s point about the income effect
on environmental demands—I always like to put
this in the context of my grandfather migrating from
Serbia to work in the mines of Montana in the early
1900s and try to imagine what he would have said if
we had told him we were going to spend what we do now
in Montana, roughly $2,000–$3,000 an acre, to
reclaim land. He would have thought that was about the
most insane kind of thing, regardless of the property
rights. Today we spend, mind you, $2,000–$3,000
an acre, a lot more than the land is worth after it’s
reclaimed. But that aside, the point is when these demands
started to arise, under the common law, many of these
polluting kinds of things were being taken care of,
and the extractive industry is a case in point. Rick
mentioned Elizabeth Brubaker’s book. There are
a number of publications that document the kinds of
cases that were being decided through the common law,
which basically involved protecting people’s rights
against aggression from others.
Q: Which environmental organizations
support market-based solutions?
A: [Anderson] Well, again, if
Rick doesn’t mind, I’ll start. I quipped
the other day that if you want to know whether a group
supports generally the notion of free market environmentalism,
check its zip code. If it’s a Washington, D.C.,
zip code, they probably don’t. They like having
control of the levers of power in a central place, as
do many of the lobbying organizations. That said, I
think that there’s growing receptivity amongst
some of them and I would take a moment to relate to
you two meetings I had early in the Bush administration.
When people knew that I had been on an advisory team
to the president, they assumed that somehow I had a
direct line to people in Washington. Which may have
been true until PERC published a report card on the
mid-term of the president which gave him a C-. I was
asked to publish an article at the time and gave him
a D. I don’t get phone calls returned. At any
rate, having been a part of that team, I received phone
calls from two organizations, the Audubon Society and
Environmental Defense, and was asked, if I were in New
York anytime soon, could I please meet with both of
those people in separate meetings. And so I did. I met
first with the person from the Audubon Society, and
we talked about market approaches, and I used the example
of grazing on public land, something that many environmentalists
support. And I said look, ranchers have very secure
permits to graze on these public lands. If we want to
get rid of them, simply make them transferable and let
those people who don’t want grazing purchase the
permits. And John Flicker said, yeah, that would really
work, but you know, they shouldn’t have those
rights. And I said, well, let me grant you that maybe
they shouldn’t. Let’s not debate that. Would
you agree that if we had tradable permits, we could
reduce grazing? Yes, but you know, they shouldn’t
have those rights. We went on like that for half an
hour, and finally I went from that issue to the next.
I met the next day with Fred Krupp, president of Environmental
Defense. In the same discussion, he said some people
will argue they shouldn’t have those rights. The
time has come to simply abandon the debate of whether
they should or shouldn’t and get on with taking
the status quo rights and moving forward. So I have
become a rather good champion for Environmental Defense.
They’re working with PERC on the issue of individual
transferable quotas in fisheries. We’re doing
joint programs. I went with one of the Environmental
Defense people early on to Washington, D.C., at the
request of Interior Secretary Gail Norton to speak to
all the water people. They were kind of looking for
the fur to fly as we came in, but we basically sang
from the same music. Get the property rights right.
Get them secure, make them transferable, and many of
these problems will disappear. So there are a few even
900-pound gorillas, but get to the local level where
people want results and they’ll buy into markets
quite quickly.
A2: [Stroup] I think that’s
very well put. The local people by and large care about
a clean, healthy and attractive environment. We can
do business with these folks. It’s the same thing
we want. But if you’re talking about simple political
control and big budgets, it’s a different problem.
And if you look at the local Bozeman reps or the Montana
reps of some of the big famous environmental groups
in Washington, it’s very difficult to have a decent
conversation with them because what they’re interested
in is control in Washington, end of story. That’s
not true across the board, I’m sure, but in my
experience, that’s the way it is. Folks locally
care about the local environment just like all the rest
of us do.
Q: As usual we want to give the last
word to Milton and Rose if they want to take it.
[Rose]: I’ll let you take it.
[Milton]: I believe in environmental
quality through property rights. Free market environmentalism
is where we should go. And you people have been doing
a great job in that respect.
|