by BigTex » Wed 09 Apr 2008, 19:25:09
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Twilight', 'W')hy this belief that economics and overshoot are somehow incompatible, or that the latter represents a failure of the former?
Ultimately economics is only a means of describing the process of bargaining and exchange, and this is a behaviour that is pretty much part of our genetic inheritance. It has been with us since we came down from the trees and it will be with us when we have turned our urban centres into quarries. The mental tools we would use for analysing such interaction would vary little between epochs, and have not even varied that much between ideologies.
Don't fall into the trap of believing economics promises an outcome, it does not. It just lets you think a little bit about how things happened. If there was failure, it was very human.
I think it is the asumption that there will always be an alternative that gives economic analysis a bad rep in some parts.
In a finite world, it seems that at some point there will not be an alternative to one or more non-renewable resource(s).
Also, if there are some truly key resources that we can't do without (e.g., potable water, breathable air, or somewhere to dump all the fecal matter of civilization), it may be that the only alarm that economic analysis would provide would be way too late to leave meaningful mitigation strategies (I raised this same issue in another thread today to MrBill).
For example, if the current price of oil is a signal of an impending (or recently occurred) peak in production, economics would have only given us a price signal when the peak was upon us. It would have been nice to have an analytical tool that could co-exist with economics that would have told us several decades ago that it might be prudent to begin thinking in terms of lower consumption of fossil fuels. As it was, economics only provided high prices in reaction to a sort of scarcity "head fake" from OPEC, which ultimately led to a price collapse at about the time that we should have been aggressively seeking to develop new forms/sources of energy, but here again, price led us in the wrong direction--low prices prevented the development of alternative energy back in the 1980s, which would have given us much-needed lead time to deal with where we find ourselves today.
Instead, we got a pack of white elephants in the form of the big SUV.