Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
GEOG 3404 Economic Geography LECTURE 9: Efficiency, Equity and Sustainability Dr. Zachary Klaas Department of Geography and Environmental Studies Carleton University Goals for the world economic system Our final lecture is centred around the question of how to evaluate the workings of the world economic system. How do we know whether the performance of an economic system is justified? The criteria by which we consider an economic system justified should be the first object of our enquiries. Is it clear that these criteria are generally shared? We will consider, for the purposes of this lecture, three of the more popular universal criteria for the justification of the economic system: the efficiency of the system, the equity of the system, and the sustainability of the system. In addition, we will address the possibility of more particular cultural criteria for the justification of an economic system, and whether such criteria are reasonable in light of the more universalistic approaches to the issue. Efficiency An efficient economic system is one which achieves maximum productivity within the constraints of one’s initial endowments with respect to the factors of production. We attempt to measure this sort of thing via measures like: Gross Domestic Product or GDP [the total market value of goods and services produced within a country during a study period, such as a calendar year] Gross National Product or GNP [same as GDP, but adding income earned by citizens of the country abroad, and subtracting income earned by foreigners while in the country, during a study period] Net Domestic Product or NDP [same as GDP, but subtracting out a figure corresponding to the depreciation of capital over the study period] Net National Product or NNP [same as GNP, but subtracting out a figure corresponding to the depreciation of capital over the study period] The GDP is a widely used measure of a nation’s efficiency, and comparison across nations is often done using the GDP as a common metric of efficiency. GDP: A reasonable measure of efficiency? As a direct measure of the output of goods and services, GDP is unquestionably a good measure of productivity. Nevertheless, we can ask some reasonable questions about how this metric represents efficiency of production amongst a region’s population. First of all, we often see GDP represented as a per capita (Latin for “by the head” – meaning “per person”) statistic. The use of GDP as a per capita statistic carries within it the seeds of potential distortion. After all, is it true that the responsibility for the efficiency represented by per capita GDP is truly distributed equally across the entire population of a region? In other words, if Canada has a per capita GDP of around $40,000, does that really mean that every Canadian does his or her part to create $40,000 in goods or services? More likely, there is some variation within the regional unit that is concealed by the statistic when used on a per capita basis. This is a criticism of GDP from an equity point of view. Secondly, we may ask whether GDP being maximised today is necessarily something which leads to its maximisation tomorrow. Practices which maximise GDP today, in the short-term, may harm it tomorrow or in the long-term. For example, overfishing the cod in Newfoundland’s Grand Banks maximised GDP in the short term, but also represents a depletion of the resource which makes possible future efficiency for the fishing industry. This is a criticism of GDP from a sustainability point of view. Thirdly, we may ask whether GDP takes into account goods and services which are provided through the informal economy (that is to say, through non-market means). The GDP is usually represented in terms of a standard currency (for example, dollars), and this representation should tip us off to the fact that what is being represented are transactions in a conventional market, where goods and services are given monetary value and paid for in money. But in some economies, exchange still takes place through bartering, or other kinds of non-market direct trade of commodities. GDP misses this, unless some effort is made to weight these transactions as if they were made as more conventional market transactions and valued in dollars. This criticism of GDP is essentially made from a cultural point of view. What is involved in the measure of GDP? The Gross Domestic Product is made up of four essential components: consumption (that portion of the GDP which goes directly to satisfying the economic wants and needs of individuals) – represented as C; investment (that portion of the GDP which goes towards providing for future production) – represented as I; government spending (that portion of the GDP which goes towards maintaining state services, via taxation usually) – represented as G; net exports (that portion of the GDP which is exported abroad, less the value of products imported into the country) – represented as (X-M). The “expenditure method” equation for GDP: GDP = C + I + G + (X-M). What does the “expenditure approach” imply about efficient production? Efficiency, the “expenditure approach” seems to imply, is “about something”. Production may not done simply for its own sake, but in order to promote other specified goals. In other words, we produce in order that we may consume what has been produced (consumption), in order that we may invest further in production (investment), in order that we may support government services (government spending), or in order that we might trade with others (net exports). Arguably, all of these reduce to consumption as the goal. Goals relating to preparing oneself economically for the future (e.g., investment, government spending, net exports) may really be expressions of “delayed consumption”. That is, we seek out these goals because we are ultimately concerned with consumption as the main goal. The view of John Maynard Keynes The economist John Maynard Keynes was notable for his strongly articulated view that economies are, first and foremost, about promoting the “consumption function”. Other goals are, for Keynes, at their core, ultimately about promoting consumption. If they are to be regarded, as many do, as “delayed consumption”, this was fine from Keynes’ point of view, so long as the delay was not too long. In the 1930s, during a time of worldwide economic depression, Keynes argued that it was vital to ensure that economic systems be judged by how efficiently they provided for consumption. Keynes viewed the stimulation of economic demand (the “consumption” side of the economy, as opposed to economic supply, which represent the “production” side of the economy) as critical for bringing economies out of depression. Firms need people to buy products – when there is a lack of consumers, ultimately, production will also fail. In addition, although Keynes recognised that markets have the power to correct themselves over time, he also believed that allowing consumption to not be served over long periods of time while a market slowly corrects itself was barbaric. “In the long run,” Keynes famously said, “we are all dead.” In his view, markets need to respond to the needs of consumers in a timely fashion. Previously to Keynes, many economists had focused on the importance of savings, another example of “delayed consumption” – when you save for the future, you do so presumably in order to use the money for consumption at a later date. Keynes, however, believed that when an economy is in recession or depression, having tremendous savings only takes money out of circulation in the economy. In other words, Keynes believed that too much saving hurts the economy in times of crisis, by reducing the consumption function. The “euthanasia of the rentier” This view that efficiency in an economy implies efficiency specifically with respect to promoting consumption generally in the population was one Keynes maintained as a consistent theme in his economic work. Towards that end, Keynes conceived of the notion of a rentier capitalist, or a capitalist who profits off of the mere scarcity of capital, as the kind of capitalist whose “rent-seeking” behaviour is an affront to the consumer, rather than involved with promoting the consumer’s interests. For Keynes, it is the rentier, not the capitalist generally, who needs to be eliminated from economic life, chiefly because his or her actions do nothing to effectively provide goods or services to people. In a somewhat jarring passage in his writings, Keynes advocates the gradual (and hopefully metaphorical!!) “euthanasia” of the subclass of rentier capitalists. We can easily compare Keynes’ view here with those of Henry George and Karl Marx – indeed, it appears that Keynes is applying George’s concern with profit off of scarce resources to a modern economic world where capital, rather than land, is the chief source of economic power. Unlike Henry George (who promoted the single tax as the solution to advance the cause of his views of political economy) or Karl Marx (who promoted revolution as the solution for his view of political economy), Keynes tended to promote the “euthanasia of the rentier” through a number of policy initiatives, each with varying degrees of success. In general, Keynes felt that lowering interest rates would do the most to harm the cause of the rentier, as profiting off of the hoarding of capital would be less lucrative if interest rates were as low as they could be – enough to pay the “good” capitalists for their industry, but not so high to reward the rentiers. Perhaps more interestingly, though, Keynes generally put things down to a choice – if one has a reasonably clear choice between promoting the consumption function on the one hand or “disappointing the rentier” on the other, one should assertively opt to promote consumption. Granted, sometimes such choices are not all that clear – distinguishing between what is a justified return on an investment and what is “profiting off of scarcity” is, as we have previously discussed, not always easy. Nevertheless, there are occasions when the choice does seem clear. Equity Another possible goal which one might promote via an economic system is the goal of equity. Equity is the general equalisation of outcomes in an economy. This notion can be expressed in terms of one of various (and potentially competing) visions: equality of formal rights – in this view, equality is defined in terms of access to formal protections of custom or law, whereby no person has any more or any less of these formal protections equal shares – in this view, equality is defined in terms of literally equal outcomes, either regardless of contribution, or within a scheme of contribution (e.g. “equal pay for equal work”) a maximin distribution – in this view, those the least well-off in terms of outcomes should be most benefitted by the overall distribution Equality of formal rights This view of equality is most often associated with political libertarianism. The basic viewpoint is that individuals can only meaningfully be accorded equal treatment by the law. Anything done beyond this in order to promote social welfare empowers undue interference in people’s lives and establishes authoritarian controls which do not even ultimately help the disadvantaged. The key such right most libertarians are keen to defend in the economic sphere is the right to property. Karl Marx lampooned this kind of equality. “The law,” he said, quoting Anatole France, “in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike from…sleeping under bridges…” The point here is that only the poor would have to do this, so this “equal” law applies unequally. Marxists have taken up this kind of opposition to what they term “bourgeois rights”. Nevertheless, equality of formal rights is something that can serve as the precondition for other rights. The role of equal democratic rights, for example, was even acknowledged by Marx as a reason why socialism, when it comes to places like the U.S., the U.K. or the Netherlands, could possibly come peacefully rather than through revolutionary violence. Equal shares This view of equality is most directly attributable to Marxism. In Marx’s arguments, this view characterises the arrangement of economic outcomes with respect to both the “socialist” stage of development (where distribution is done according to “to each according to his work”) and the “communist” stage of development (where the distribution follows the rule “to each according to his need”). This view promotes the idea that, barring any great distinctions in how much labour people can do or how needy they are, their economic outcomes should be as similar as possible. Whenever those outcomes vary – and no matter how this affects productivity – this constitutes the injustice of Marxian exploitation. It is possible, however, that some stratification in terms of the distribution of wealth actually can lead to the total pool of wealth getting bigger. In other words, the existence of incentives to make more money can actually result in all of society, even the worst off in the distribution, being better off than they might otherwise have been. The maximin distribution This view of equality is largely associated with the social liberalism of the political philosopher John Rawls. In this view, differences in outcomes are arranged, insofar as this is possible, so that they are the most advantageous to those the least well-off in the distribution of outcomes. This kind of distribution is referred to as a maximin distribution, as it maximises the position of those minimally well-off. Maximin conceptions of distributive justice tend to be more popular than the equal shares sorts of conceptions because they allow for greater social prosperity and productivity. On the other hand, they can lead to situations where those most well-off in the system can use their riches, which may help the least well-off today, to dominate them tomorrow. In other words, the maximin distribution can be satisfied today and create the conditions for its violation tomorrow. Sustainability Another consideration we must make about economic systems is their ability to continue on in the future, under the same operational logic that they currently employ. This is referred to as the sustainability of the economic system. In the 1970s and 1980s, a “green” criticism of traditional views of political economy began. The first major work to lead this wave of criticism was Rudolf Bahro’s The Alternative in Eastern Europe. A centrepiece of Bahro’s work was the claim that both Western capitalism and Eastern socialism had utterly failed to prevent development pressures from overrunning the stock of natural resources and unduly interfering with ecological systems. Bahro’s work inspired a number of “political ecologists” whose basic standpoint reflects that same premise, that both capitalism and socialism harm the environment when they are premised on an underlying acceptance of industrialism. Industrialism Essentially, “industrialism” plays a role for ecologists largely the same as the one “capitalism” plays for socialists – it is the bogey that those in the movement oppose. It is a catch-all term for economic development which ignores environmental cost and the need to sustain economies into the long-term future. The aim of the “green” movement is properly understood to be the use of legal and social tools to restrain, as much as is possible, heedless “industrialism” and promote economic development that does not deplete essential stocks of natural resources or interfere with important natural processes. The notion of “full-cost pricing” exposits this aim the best – economic costs should be weighted, according to this view, by their future effects on the environment. This would provide disincentives to develop, but only where development is itself environmentally problematic. One final twist: different economic goals for different cultures? The kinds of economic goals we have thus far discussed are general or universal in their application. But is it possible that there are different cultural understandings of the proper goal for an economy? Take, for example, the right of Canadian aboriginal populations to use land according to the principle of usufruct. This principle implies that the property of another may be used for certain purposes, so long as the land still has value to its owner. In Canada, what this amounts to is a right for aboriginal persons to hunt and fish on land that is owned by others. This right is a “traditional” right associated with aboriginal culture, and not available to the nonaboriginal population, which must respect the property boundaries and not hunt and fish on the property. Does this make sense? Should there be a general right to use land in a usufructary manner, or should this continue to be respected as a specific cultural inheritance of aboriginal peoples in the economic sphere?