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The Global Warming Lie Detector

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The House's passage of the Waxman-Markey bill raises the possibility that the United States will finally do something on global warming. This prospect has the industry hacks screaming at top volume about the horrible fate that awaits the economy. Everyone should know not to take them seriously, as I will explain in a moment.

First, we should acknowledge the obvious: The bill is awful. It gives away permits to greenhouse gas emitters that should instead be auctioned. As a result, money that could be rebated to taxpayers or used to fund the development of clean technologies instead goes to the industries that are the source of the problem.

Second, the use of tradable permits rather than a tax is a rather questionable policy. Permits will almost certainly require more government enforcement bureaucracy than a system of taxes and subsidies. And, incidentally, permits will allow Goldman Sachs and our other Wall Street friends to make tens of billions of dollars on trading fees in the coming decades, a high priority for all Americans.

But a bad bill is almost certainly better than no bill. If Waxman-Markey doesn't get through, it is very difficult to see another bill getting through this Congress. And there is no reason to believe that the Congress that gets elected in 2010 will be any less indebted to the corporate lobbyists.

The Waxman-Markey bill should be viewed as a foot in the door. It is a modest first step toward reducing greenhouse gas emissions that both demonstrates a commitment and provides an opportunity to show the public that emissions can be lowered without imposing an enormous economic burden on the country.

Of course, the only reason that so many people believe that reducing greenhouse gas emissions will impose an enormous burden on the economy is that the oil and coal industry, and their friends in the media, have been pushing this tripe for more than a decade. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that the cost of the Waxman-Markey bill at $22 billion a year in 2020. That will be equal to less than 0.1 percent of projected GDP in that year, or about $70 out of the pocket of each person in the country.

The coal and oil companies are greatly anguished over this prospective burden on American families, but let's compare this burden to the burden posed by Iraq war levels of defense spending. Two years ago, the Center for Economic and Policy Research commissioned Global Insight to use its model to project the economic impact of Iraq war levels of military spending. They projected the effect on the economy of a sustained increase in defense spending equal to 1.0 percent of GDP, an amount slightly less than the increase sustained in the years following the start of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars.

Global Insight was selected because it is one of the oldest econometric forecasting firms in the country. Its model has been widely used for a wide variety of analyses and it certainly is not associated with progressive or anti-defense politics. Its model is also very much in the mainstream of the economics profession. It will not produce results that are qualitatively different than any other mainstream model.

The model projected that after 10 years of higher spending, GDP would be down by about $17 billion from baseline levels. After 20 years (2021 if defense spending stays high), GDP would be down by more than $60 billion from baseline levels, approximately three times CBO's projection of the cost of the Waxman-Markey bill.

Of course, these projections don't show the full loss to households, since they don't include the money that must be diverted from taxes or obtained by borrowing to support the higher level of defense spending. These figures are just the lost output.

Global Insight projected that after 20 years of higher defense spending, annual car sales would be down by more than 700,000. Housing starts would be almost 40,000 lower. Exports would be 1.8 percent lower and imports would be 2.7 percent higher, leading to a trade deficit that would be almost $200 billion larger. The model also projected that there would be nearly 700,000 fewer jobs as a result of the higher level of defense spending.

In short, the economic harm projected from high levels of military spending is far larger than the damage projected from the Waxman-Markey bill. Given this situation, we would have expected that all the oil and coal industry folks, who are now so concerned about the average family's well-being, would have been screaming about the economic pain that would result from sustaining the Iraq war levels of military spending.

Did anyone ever hear them raise this issue? Does anyone recall members of Congress giving speeches about how the job loss from the Iraq war levels of spending would be devastating? Does anyone recall any newspaper columns or editorials making this point? How about a news story that analyzed the economic impact of higher levels of military spending?

For some reason, job loss and economic pain associated with the military are just not worth mentioning. These items only become newsworthy when the issue is saving the environment. And the elites wonder why the public has so little confidence in the country's institutions.


13 Comments

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Job loss estimates are reserved for moral judgments that don't involve direct violence. The grandeur of direct violence trumps the moral calculus.

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Speaking of global warming, economists and lies, Michelle Malkin, aided by CBS, is heating up the right side of the blogosphere with the 'news' that EPA suppressed an in-house skeptical report written by an economist in the EPAs Administration office.

That oh-so-non-partisan CEI 'thunk' tank has the 'evidence', along with some emails that explain why the report was not accepted.

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Cap-and-trade worked exceedingly well for acid rain remediation, despite predictions of enormous expense and massive job losses, none of which materialized. The Waxman-Markey bill is certainly inadequate, but if we pass no legislation, not only will we be failing to contribute to climate change mitigation, but our inaction will discourage any other nation from taking serious steps to curtail carbon emissions. In a sense, it's the international repercussions of what we do that will exert more of an impact than our own small contribution.

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Bad as the W/M bill is, it is only likely to be WORSE coming thru the Senate.

There are many good parts of the bill that, when the rest of it gets eviscerated even more, would mostly be easier to pass than the cap'n trade portion. My own view is that when the inevitable happens in the Senate, they should pass the good but less controversial parts, then turn to the good but possibly controversial parts (not capn trade), and try to pass them perhaps in more than one piece, and then have NATIONALLY TELEVISED HEARINGS WITH AS MUCH SPOTLIGHT AS GAYS IN THE MILITARY GOT IN 1993 (by the laws of physics perhaps an impossibility), and in those hearings HIGHLIGHT THE OBSERVATIONS OF JIM HANSEN AND OTHER CLIMATOLOGISTS ON HOW DIRE THE SITUATION IS, AND HOW WE NEED NOT JUST TO LOWER EMISSIONS BY 83% BY 2050, BUT LOWER ATMOSPHERIC LEVELS FROM THEIR CURRENT LEVELS (meaning NET NEGATIVE GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS (GHG) EMISSIONS AND WAY BEFORE 2050). Then the political turf will be primed for better legislation, such as a ban-and-phaseout of coal generated electricity, a phased in carbon tax ON CARBON INTENSITY OF ENERGY PRODUCTION ABOVE THE LEVEL OF NATURAL GAS, and a massive, Manhattan Project like publicly invested system of essentially having ALL new electricity generation come from clean alternative sources, while other legislation radically forces much higher mileage combined with a rapid shift to hydrogen, INCREASED forestation globally rather than deforestation, national flat electric rates, full first world financing third world (poorer nations of the TW) transition to clean fuel, etc.

Obviously, asap we will need to start constructing location-based filters that filter GHGs (and while they're at it, hopefully other stuff like ODCs and mercury etc) out of the atmosphere, and placing umpteen zillion of these around the world, but this is obviously a non-immediate step (start w/research and experimentation and development (RED))

People may say that the goals are impossible, but once it is clear that this is what MUST be done as opposed to what CAN be done, then, like WWII, the necessary might simply be done. A long shot but our best shot

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MAN'S EFFECT ON CLIMET CHANGE CAN'T EVEN BE MEASURED. THE CLIMET HAS BEEN CHANGING FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS. WHY DO YOU THINK THE EARTH IS NO LONGER COVERED IN ICE. LET'S HAVE A REAL DEBATE BY SCIENTIST NOT POLITICIAN'S

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MAN'S EFFECT ON CLIMET CHANGE CAN'T EVEN BE MEASURED. THE CLIMET HAS BEEN CHANGING FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS. WHY DO YOU THINK THE EARTH IS NO LONGER COVERED IN ICE. LET'S HAVE A REAL DEBATE BY SCIENTIST NOT POLITICIAN'S

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Good point, all caps person. Obviously over decades of studying climate the world's scientists never thought to check those things, and need you to suggest it.

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"The model projected that after 10 years of higher spending, GDP would be down by about $17 billion from baseline levels. After 20 years (2021 if defense spending stays high), GDP would be down by more than $60 billion from baseline levels, approximately three times CBO's projection of the cost of the Waxman-Markey bill."

Oddly enough, no one ever makes this argument about health care, or bailouts for GM or financial firms. At least, no one friendly to the Obama Administration, anyway.

Higher spending is bad, period. It doesn't matter what you spend it on.

Waxman-Markey is a good idea in a package that makes that idea both useless and damaging. A real cap-and-trade system would be a sensible way to reduce greenhouse emissions (not that it matters, since Asia will be adding greenhouse emissions faster than we can possibly reduce them anyway for the foreseeable future). Waxman-Markey is as environmentally friendly as th last Bush Administration energy bill; and almost as expensive.

Of course, Henry Waxman is the worst Congressman currently serving, now that Jesse Helms is gone, so what do you expect.

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Boy, you and I know a different Waxman. He is incredible and if the feet of the previous admin ever get held to the fire, Henry will be leading the pack. Go Henry!!

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Yep, that's the right Henry Waxman. Always focused on the useless and ideological claptrap at the expense of actual policy.

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vill is awful. It gives away permits to greenhouse gas emitters that should instead be auctioned. As a result, money that could be rebated to taxpayers or used to fund the development of clean technologies instead goes to the industries that are the
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