Public Bad

A public bad, in green economics, is a good that produces socially undesirable results. Pollution is the most obvious example. There are less obvious examples. A public golf course, for instance, could be seen as a public good insofar as it provides recreation to those who might not otherwise get it. But deforestation, excess water use and pesticide use to maintain it might well be seen as public bads, externalizing harms on future and current generations. Most green economists advise measuring such impacts back to the present from the seventh generation. Thus in the golf course example, both the recreation and the negative impacts from deforestation, associated habitat and biodiversity loss, and pesticide toxicity would be estimated across those generations and some amortization applied to determine whether the golf course was a public benefit or a public bad from the point of view of that seventh generation. Green economists argue that the costs of public bads are hidden from the businesses that cause them - meaning the market is not working correctly. The legal challenge is to create a system that takes into account these costs. The Environmental Protection Agency in the USA is an example of an attempt to make sure the costs of public bads are taken into account, although some groups on the right and left have criticized the value of its efforts.

See also

*externality

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
arsenal tube station
andrea orcagna
mobile submarine simulator
uss stingray (ss 161)
the washington blade
gp32
green bay, wisconsin
basilica di santa maria novella
cryptome
bay of green bay
sema
the three musketeers
orsanmichele
finsbury park station
duccio
simone martini
surplus value
value added tax
list of cantatas by johann sebastian bach
list of chorale harmonisations by johann sebastian bach
trade pact
list of songs and arias of johann sebastian bach
king muryeong of baekje
social welfare function
nine stories (salinger)
confirmation
dynamic equilibrium
agreement
minesweeper (ship)
shifting cultivation
invertible matrix
history of anatomy in ancient times
alexandrian school of anatomy
history of arabian physicians
anatomy in the school of bologna
osroene
history of the french school of anatomy
probability vector
history of anatomy in the 19th century
history of french systematic anatomists
history of modern anatomy
goto retto
the strange case of dr. jekyll and mr. hyde
purchasing power