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by alfredallan1
2918 days ago
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I’m less liberal than many, but I’m curious how the conservative movement feels issues like climate change and clean oceans and clean air, or even net neutrality ought to be dealt with, if not by govt regulation. Or is the line of thinking that only those rich enough to buy face masks, and have climate controlled mansions with private beaches may enjoy those things.. Maybe this is entirely orthogonal to this thread, so maybe there could be a separate HN thread just for this discussion? I welcome your suggestion and am wholly on board but I really don’t think individually emailing you is the most productive method to have, what is in fact, a wide ranging discussion with multiple participants. |
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Generally, via Pigovian taxes that internalize the externality consistently without creating additional distortions or utilizing arbitrary ad-hoc regulation — ideally in a revenue-neutral way via dividends.
See, for example, the Trent Lott-John Breaux group announced this week to push for the Baker-Shultz carbon dividend plan (supported by economists including former CEA chairs Greg Mankiw and Martin Feldstein and Fed chairs Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen).
(It should be noted that the Clean Air Act and the formation of the EPA came under Richard Nixon, of all people.)
[0] Americans for Carbon Dividends (new group, political): http://www.afcd.org
[1] Climate Leadership Council (old group, academic): https://www.clcouncil.org
[2] AFCD Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/19/climate/carbon-tax-climat...
[3] This year's op-ed on AFCD: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/20/opinion/climate-change-fe...
[4] Last year's op-ed on CLC (economists): https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/08/opinion/a-conservative-ca...
[5] Last year's op-ed on CLC (politicians): https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-conservative-answer-to-climat...