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eduren | 6 years ago
If we had a carbon tax that correctly priced the environmental impact of goods, it would decrease consumption. Without having to shame people into removing themselves from the economy.
eduren | 6 years ago
If we had a carbon tax that correctly priced the environmental impact of goods, it would decrease consumption. Without having to shame people into removing themselves from the economy.
lukifer|6 years ago
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigovian_tax
eduren|6 years ago
reubens|6 years ago
"Increasing the retail price of tobacco products through higher taxes is the single most effective way to decrease consumption and encourage tobacco users to quit." [0]
https://www.who.int/tobacco/mpower/publications/en_tfi_mpowe...
brycehamrick|6 years ago
TheChaplain|6 years ago
E.g. raising gas prices will dramatically hurt citizens living on the country side or outside cities without public transport, and force them to move into the cities, which in turn cause higher demand on housing and rent increase.
orev|6 years ago
skittleson|6 years ago
aaomidi|6 years ago
Lower middle class should see no change. Middle class should see a net loss if they don't change their habits. And anything beyond would see a substantial loss.
Give each person a carbon ration, if you didn't use it fully you get money back. If you used more than your fair share you have to pay significantly large taxes that go directly to the pockets of people who use less and infrastructure.
tomjen3|6 years ago
ftkudtkfkl|6 years ago
daenz|6 years ago
No, you'll just remove them from the economy without their consent, by introducing regulation to artificially lower supply. Everyone is against this: the companies who won't make as much profit and the consumers who won't be able to purchase the goods that they want. Good luck with that.
eduren|6 years ago
A few things:
1. Presumably any carbon tax would have to be secured and defended by our democratic institutions. Thus we would have consent (or as close as you can get to large scale consent in our multi-actor society). While I agree that regulating basic consumption for large swaths of the economy has a bit of an authoritarian bend to it, I'm not sure how else we incentivize ourselves to decrease consumption.
2. Lowered supply is not a given. Companies would be incentivized to find production chains, energy sources, and materials that had a lower impact (and thus a lower tax). Less impactful products would be able to price themselves under the high-impact products and satiate the demand.
EDIT Added 3. Consumption itself is not the enemy. The thing we want to minimize is negative externalities. It just so happens that under our current system, manipulating levels of consumption is the only lever our society has for affecting industrial emissions.
prepend|6 years ago
If we want to buy less we need to shrink the economy, including government spend.
Personally, I’m just trying to build more things and gather more things myself. Buys less and saves money.
bognition|6 years ago