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by rablackburn
1142 days ago
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Not put words in OPs mouth, but saying they “just want to control people” is perhaps not what they’re going for. Since you raised the valid point of “why make everyone pay”, it seems they (OP) are concerned that currently _everyone_ is paying for the externalities of shitty electronics and the associated ewaste. Of course these kinds of externalities are impossible (or just really hard?) to rectify at the individual-action level, its a collective action problem. So they raised the interesting point why not target the specific companies who manufactured this faulty product and require them to clean-up the problem they’ve created. If nothing else, it’s a useful conversation to have? |
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Assume for the sake of argument, that I agree that there are externalities and that we should do something about them.
The economics textbook tells you the simple solution: tax the externalities. In our case, you might want to tax e-waste (or directly tax whatever is bad about e-waste, like heavy metals or so.)
Then let the market figure out how to deal with it. Perhaps offering extended warranties is the way to go? Perhaps developing compostable computers is the way to go? Perhaps using fewer computers is the way to go? Perhaps just sucking it up, doing nothing and paying for the externalities is the way to go?
It's not at all obvious to me which of these (if any) is the best solution. And I don't have high hopes than any government would figure out the best solution either.
Different people might even have different answers, and suppliers can provide for this diversity.
This simple tax avoids a lot of regulatory complexity. Remember, that regulatory complexity leads to loopholes and regulatory capture and endless lobbying.