John Williams wrote:
> "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>   
>>  It is clear that climate change is not something 
>> the market can handle in any effective manner. Only government action has 
>> any 
>> possibility of tackling this problem.
>>     
>
> I do not have blind faith in government to solve difficult problems. The only 
> way 
> that I have seen that consistently solves difficult problems is trial and 
> error. But
> government does not do trial and error efficiently. Typically, there are very 
> few
> ideas, sometimes only one, and the failures are not abandoned, but
> instead suck down resources indefinitely. Far better to let prices and market
> forces evolve efficient solutions. If "climate change" is a high-priority 
> problem 
> that is not adequately touched by market forces, then perhaps there is a 
> small role
>  that government can play, but never in specific policy. The government role
> should be limited to addressing market failures, such as when carbon-emitters
> do not pay for costs to the environment that everyone experiences. For 
> example,
> a carbon-tax.
>   
If the problem were not urgent, if we had the luxury of reducing CO2 
emissions by 30% over the next hundred years, I would probably agree 
with you. Tweaking market incentives would probably be a very good way 
to address that sort of problem. But when you are confronted with an 
urgent life-or-death problem, the primary problem is not one of 
efficiency. For example, when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, we did 
not worry about the most efficient, market-based way of letting the 
private sector respond.

Regards,

-- 
Kevin B. O'Brien         TANSTAAFL
[EMAIL PROTECTED]      Linux User #333216

"The average Ph.D. thesis is nothing but a transference of bones from 
one graveyard to another." -- J. Frank Dobie
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