Environmentalism: THE NEW SOCIALISM
by Jane Shaw
Summer, 1996
In 1990, the economist Robert Heilbroner expressed
genuine surprise at the collapse of socialism.
Writing in The New Yorker, he recalled that in the
debates over central planning in the 1930's and 1940's, socialism seemed
to have won. A half century later he realized that he had been wrong.
Since Heilbroner has leaned toward socialism for most
of his career, he deserves credit for admitting that he was so mistaken.
Yet by the end of his revealing essay, Heilbroner was suggesting that
perhaps socialism wasn't dead, after all. He proposed "another
way" of looking at, or for, socialism. He suggested that we think
of socialism "not in terms of the specific improvements we would
like it to embody but as the society that must emerge if humanity is to
cope with the one transcendent challenge that faces it within a
thinkable time span." That challenge, says Heilbroner, is "the
ecological burden that economic growth is placing on the
environment."
Heilbroner's characterization of environmental
problems is as misinformed as his half century of wishful thinking about
socialism. But this should not be surprising. Environmental issues
frequently overwhelm intelligent thought and factual analysis.
For the past thirty years, the United States (and much
of the developed world) has experienced the results of this basic
misunderstanding, the view that economic growth poses and
"ecological burden." The nation has acted upon the premise
that more production leads to more smokestacks puffing out more
pollutants and more sewage pipes sending more heavy metals and other
wastes into our streams, and that only government regulation can stop
the process. This assumption has led to extensive federal intervention
in normal activities, from manufacturing to logging and, ultimately, to
absurd results.
The federal government defines a "wetland"
in such a way that it doesn't have to be wet, as long as it has
vegetation typical of wetlands. It regulates wetlands on the basis of
the Clean Water Act, which does not mention the word wetland (the
relevant provision was originally designed to prevent pollution into
"navigable waters." People have gone to jail for dumping a few
loads of dirt on such "wetlands."
The Endangered Species Act has been interpreted so
severely that people are now deliberately modifying the habitat of their
land so that endangered species will not settle on it. Without the act
they would have been pleased to have a bald eagle or red-cockaded
woodpecker take roost.
The government of Anchorage, Alaska, is adding 5,000
pounds of fish waste per day into its sewage water. Environmental
Protection Agency regulations require that 30 percent of the organic
material in sewage reaches the ocean, but in Anchorage, the sewage
doesn't have enough organic material. It must be added and then 30
percent must be removed.
Strict controls on grazing practices have prevented
the adoption of innovative range management. On private land, the
Deseret Ranch in Utah, for example, stocks hundreds of cattle, while the
Bureau of Land Management, which manages public land on the other side
of the fence, can barely allow thirty animals on similar acreage.
The EPA contends that a mobile home park in Aspen,
Colorado, is built on an extremely dangerous mine waste site, and that
residents face harm from lead poisoning, even though those who have
lived there for years have blood levels below the national average. The
EPA has made the park a Superfund site, and insists on a costly and
disruptive cleanup. Other small mining towns similarly face a
belligerent EPA.
How This Situation Arose
After World War II, as incomes rose, people's
attitudes toward the environment around them changed. "Postwar
affluence had produced a generation reared in relative comfort, one now
in search of 'postmaterial' values long deferred by their elders,"
writes Christopher Bosso, attempting to explain the rise of
environmentalism in the 1060's.
Against the backdrop of growing wealth and leisure,
the 1962 publication of Silent Sprint, an eloquent book by Rachel
Carlson, dropped like a bombshell. It aroused fears that the natural
world was being damaged, perhaps destroyed, by human technology. In 1972
another book, The Limits to Growth, raised fears of famine,
overpopulation, and resource depletion. The authors predicted that
"the limits to growth on this planet will be reached sometime
within the next one hundred years." When energy prices skyrocketed
after the OPEC oil embargo of 1973, the book's predictions looked
credible.
And, indeed, there were environmental problems. In
many cities the air was dirty, and rivers were polluted and full of
debris. The Cuyahoga River is said to have actually caught fire in 1969.
The event became a symbol of the severity of pollution and galvanized
many people to do something about it.
This determination to do something came at a time when
Americans were looking to the federal government to solve just about any
problem. The nation had just embarked on the War on Poverty, and the
Apollo program to land a man on the moon was nearing its objective.
State and local governments, which had taken on some
responsibility for environmental regulation, weren't always aggressive
in tightening environmental regulations, since they knew that residents
did not necessarily want the goal of cleaner air and streams to override
all other goals. But environmental activists considered these attitudes
parochial, unenlightened, and political. They sought more control at the
federal level, and they got it. Pollution control went off in a
"bold new direction," says textbook author Thomas Tietenberg,
with a "massive attempt to control the injection of substances into
our air." That federal attempt is still going on.
The nationalization of pollution control did not
eliminate environmentalist politics, of course, but changed its
location. Today, local and state governments find themselves in battles
with the Environmental Protection Agency as it threatens to cut off
funds if they donᄡ t meet the EPA's standards. And congressmen
from one state pit themselves against those of other states, with the
industrialized "Rustbelt" states in the Northeast and Midwest
voting to impose heavier controls on new plants built in
"pristine" areas such as the growing "Sunbelt."
A Basic Misunderstanding
All this has happened because most people don't know
that economic growth and environmental protection are closely and
positively linked. Economists are well aware of this. A study by Gene
Grossman and Alan Krueger of Princeton University suggests that at low
levels of income, economic growth puts initial stress on the
environment, but after a certain level of wealth is reached the
environment begins to improve. They indicated, for example, air
pollution begins to decline when per capita income reaches between
$4,000 and $5,000 (in 1985 dollars).
Another indication of this link is the affluence of
environmentalists. For example, members of environmental organizations
tend to be among the more affluent Americans. A typical reader of
Sierra, the magazine of the Sierra Club, earns twice the average
American income.
In other words, as people become more affluent, they
become more interested in protecting environmental amenities. That
doesn't in itself eliminate pollution, which will continue as long as
the air and water are, to some extent, "free goods." But in a
system based on private property rights, several factors encourage
people to limit pollution.
One factor is the common law, specifically the legal
doctrines of public and private nuisance, trespass, wrongful bodily
invasion, and riparian law. Although court suits are used less now, in
the past when pollution was severe and when it affected a few people
disproportionately (not the community as a whole), courts would provide
protection, either through damages or injunctions against further
pollution. People have a right against invasion of themselves or their
property by harmful pollutants. This protection has never been perfect,
but it has prevented or ended severe pollution.
Second, over the long run, the profit motive
encourages owners to reduce pollution. Over the short term, they may be
able to lower costs by letting waste out the smokestack, but that waste
costs them money. Particulates in the air often are unburned fuel; by
using that fuel rather than letting it go up the smokestack, companies
can save money. Similarly, companies can save money by saving expensive
chemicals or metals rather than losing them in the waste stream. So
there is an inexorable tendency to reduce pollution.
These two reasons explain why the air in the United
States was getting cleaner faster during the 1960s then in the 1970s,
when the Clean Air Act was passed. And private property rights also
encourage efficient use of raw materials.
In 1965, the production of 1,000 metal beverage cans
required 164 pounds of metal (mostly steel). By 1990, this required only
35 pounds (mostly aluminum). And the trend is toward ever lighter cans
for the simple reason that it is possible to save millions of dollars.
Reducing the aluminum can's metal by 1 percent will save about $20
million a year. The profit motive spurs both innovation and cost
savings.
Another illustration of this trend toward efficiency
is Mikhail Bernstamᄡ s comparison of resource use in socialist
and market economies. He found that the market-based economies used
about on-third the amount of energy and steel, per unit of output, that
the socialist countries used.
Partly due to the growth of incomes and the growing
awareness of the environment, private conservation has been a hallmark
of American society for more than 100 years. Late in the nineteenth
century, for example, the National Audubon Society created a system of
bird refuges around the country; early in the twentieth, the
Sempervirens Club began saving California Redwoods, in large part
through private donations. In the 1930's, activist Rosalie Edge and a
small group of friends bought a few hundred acres to create the Hawk
Mountain Sanctuary in eastern Pennsylvania, to stop the slaughter of
birds of prey. But this rich vein of history, of which these examples
are mere nuggets, is little known.
The Situation Today; Hopeful or Disturbing?
In the late 1980's, Ocie Mills began to build a home
for his son near Santa Rosa County, Florida. He poured clean fill dirt
on the property. Although he had the approval of state officials, he had
failed to obtain a permit from the federal government for filling a
wetland. Mills and his son each served a 21-month prison sentence for
failing to obtain a permit.
Criminals to some, they were to others victims of
regulatory excess. And gradually, individuals such as the Mills were
joined by hundreds, and then thousands, of people who had felt the
encroachment of the federal government. These people formed grassroots
groups around the country and became the nucleus of the modern property
rights movement, a movement that has been called a revolution. The anger
of these people who felt their rights had been trampled helped bring
sweeping changes to Congress in the 1994 election.
The 1994 election was greeted by jubilant expressions
of hope for a rollback of major regulations, repeal of some laws, and a
general recognition that less government is better. And the new House of
Representatives started out with substantial plans for regulatory
reform. But these quickly fizzled. The reason is the same one that
bothered Robert Heilbroner - the feeling that economic growth and
environmental protection are incompatible without the strong arm of
federal regulation. Environmental activists found that they could build
on this idea and frighten people into thinking that the 1994 election
had unleashed a destructive monster.
Unfortunately, the strong positive role of the private
sector in protecting the environment is mostly unknown to Congress. Even
Newt Gingrich, House Speaker and proponent of less government, appears
to be completely unfamiliar with free-market environmentalism. The
"moderate" Republicans, terrified at losing the moral high
ground by being viewed as anti-environmental, have stopped the reform
movement.
What is needed is a better understanding of
environmental protection, and particularly its connection with economic
growth and the institutions that promote economic growth. This
educational process will take time, but the evidence is there to achieve
that understanding. To borrow Heilbroner's words, that is our
"transcendent challenge."
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