by phaster » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 01:34:21
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The question, of course, is what's the difference between good and bad wealth creation? Who decides? How do you encourage one and discourage the other?
The unfortunate reality is good and bad are relative terms. If you're an auto worker building SUVs you think of those products as good, cause that is your bread and butter. You would also look at Wal Mart as a good thing cause you're buying power is greater at that shopping establishment, because that consumer store can offer a wide varity of good at lower prices (because of economies of scale).
The only way I see to encourage minimal long term damage, is to look at a basic idea found in physics and that is energy is conserved. If somehow one could calculate the embodied energy and life cycle of a product and calculate its actual cost (in terms of human work to build the product, and put an approximate value of the cost in environmental terms), then somehow got all market players (producers and consumers) to agree to said system of "human and environmental economics" that would eventually solve the good vs bad product problem.
For example if the US government closed the SUV "weight and vehicle description" loophole, and made GM and FORD abide by passanger car fuel standards (CAFE), and actually estimated a human health and environmental cost due to buring hydrocarbons, then SUVs would have never been mass market items because most people would not buy an 6000+ lb vehicle to get a gal of milk from the local strip mall.
Likewise if the government gave tax credits to domestic electric car makers and consumers, you would see those industies grow.
IMHO a GOOD product is something that must meet several criteria:
1) it must be useful and efficent
2) it must minimize damage to the environment
3) it must be a procuct that can be leveraged to grow an economy
4) it must scale to provide people employment
and a BAD products has these general characteristics:
1) kitschy products (who the hell needs plastic pink flamingos and crap like that?)
2) disposbale (one time use) except in health sector
3) inefficent (in terms of resource production natural resouce useage)