With the recent postings on biodiversity, "biowealth," ecosystem services, 
etc., I thought it appropriate to relay the recent Daly News:



________________________________

Ecosystem Services: Pricing to Peddle?
by Brian Czech

On November 15, five nations issued a complaint about a UN initiative called 
the “Global Green New 
Deal<http://www.unep.org/greeneconomy/GlobalGreenNewDeal/tabid/1371/Default.aspx>.”
  These nations claim that “nature is seen [by the UN] as ‘capital’ for 
producing tradable environmental goods and services.”  They express their 
concern about the “privatization and the mercantilization of nature through the 
development of markets for environmental services.”   They also declare their 
“condemnation of unsustainable models of economic growth.”



For the purposes of this week’s Daly News, it matters little who these nations 
are<http://climateandcapitalism.com/?p=3443>, nor does it matter if their 
interpretation of the Green New Deal is completely accurate.  What does matter 
is that their complaint ripens our attention to a widespread and growing 
controversy about the implications of valuing ecosystem services.



The good news from the Green New Deal is that ecological microeconomics (such 
as valuing ecosystem services) has risen from the recesses of academia into the 
realm of international diplomacy.  The bad news is that ecological 
macroeconomics (such as limits to growth) apparently has not.  Let’s take a 
look at the implications.



The primary distinction of ecological economics, in contrast with conventional 
or “neoclassical” economics, is that ecological economists recognize limits to 
growth and a fundamental trade-off between economic growth and environmental 
protection.  The economic pie can only get so big even if all its pieces are 
correctly priced, including ecosystem services.  Because the economic pie can 
only get so big, society must also pay greater attention to fairly distributing 
the pieces.  In order to protect the environment, and to help allocate 
resources in the fairest manner, it helps to recognize the economic value of 
ecosystem services.  That’s what ecological microeconomics is all about; 
estimating the value of natural capital and ecosystem services.



In mainstream economic circles, on the other hand, limits to growth are seen as 
nonexistent or too far off to worry about.  That leads to a nonchalant attitude 
about fairness; just grow the economy because a “rising tide lifts all boats.”  
Traditional economists don’t mind valuing ecosystem services, however.  As long 
as the prices are right, and markets are established, ecosystem services can be 
allocated efficiently, just like steel and milk into guns and butter.



The valuation of ecosystem services provides some common ground for 
neoclassical and ecological economics.  That should be a good thing.  However, 
common ground can be a minefield, too.  Many a well-meaning bureaucrat and 
diplomat are stumbling toward the landmines.



Perhaps the two most common concerns about valuing ecosystem services are:  1)  
Many ecosystem services are beyond the ability of humans to estimate the value 
of, much less to “price” for the market.  “Value of the ozone layer?  
Priceless.”  2)  The valuing of ecosystem services begs a market, then 
monetization of the services such that they are viewed as commodities to be 
traded like hogs or hoola hoops.  For many cultures this offends the senses of 
dignity and harmony with the natural world.  “Would you take 40,000 hogs for 
the climate regulation provided by that forest over there?”



But my concern is with another problem; namely, our inattention to where the 
money comes from to pay for services such as water filtration, carbon 
sequestration, pollination, etc.  There seems to be an attitude that, if we 
just throw enough money at a problem, we’ll solve it.  And that is precisely 
the attitude that creeps in when ecological microeconomics is not complemented 
with a healthy dose of ecological macroeconomics.  Markets convey the idea that 
you can have as much as you want as long as you pay the right price; ecological 
macroeconomics says the total is limited and the right market price should 
simply ration the limited total. And if the total is not limited then it is 
hard for the price to be “right”.



We especially need more awareness of the trophic origins of 
money<http://steadystate.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/CASSE_Brief_TrophicStructureOfTheEconomy.pdf>.
  Money doesn’t grow on trees, but it does come from the ground in a very real 
sense.  The amount of money available for the purchasing of guns, butter, hogs 
or carbon sequestration originates from the agricultural and extractive surplus 
that frees the hands for the division of labor.



In other words, it is not the ozone layer that “generates” money for throwing 
at its priceless service.  Nor does the North Pole “generate” the money for 
ecotourists to witness it.  What generates money is activity on the ground – on 
the farm, in the forest, in the fishery – that gives everyone else their food, 
as well as the materials for their clothing and shelter.  Everyone else is then 
free to work in the manufacturing or service sectors.  With plenty of surplus, 
the economy can even support bankers, actors, and financial engineers who set 
up markets for trading carbon permits.  That’s the trophic structure of the 
human economy.



The more our farmers, loggers, and fishermen produce, the more money we’ll all 
have for the bank, the movies, and trading in biodiversity credits.  But of 
course the more we ask them to produce, the more environmental impact we’ll 
have.  If you insist on growing the economy and protecting the environment, 
eventually the bank and the theatre will be empty; your money’s going straight 
to the ecosystem services market.  It’s like robbing Peter to pay Paul.



Now consider the other side of the coin, so to speak.  We often hear about the 
investment in the Catskill Mountains watershed that provides clean water to New 
York City.  I’m all for it!  But it’s no example of reconciling the conflict 
between economic growth and environmental protection.  What do the growthers 
think they’re going to do in that watershed:  open hog farms and build 
high-rises?  No, by “investing” in that natural capital a decision was made to 
keep the land relatively free from intensive economic activity.  That’s not the 
kind of investment they like to hear about in New York City, at least not on 
Wall Street.



So I’ll stop short of saying, “Let’s encourage all the ecological 
microeconomics we can get.”  Let’s encourage some of it, while realizing that 
there are only so many ecological economists to go around.  Let’s encourage far 
more study and practice of ecological macroeconomics.  With microeconomics, 
let’s help to demonstrate what’s at stake when we mine an aquifer or pull up a 
fishery.  But more importantly, let’s not peddle those ecosystem services like 
they’re rubber boots.  Remember where the money comes from to pay for them: the 
liquidation of natural capital stocks somewhere else.  That’s ecological 
macroeconomics, and that leads to a steady state economy where some of those 
precious ecosystem services stay where they belong: out of the market.

________________________

Brian Czech, Visiting Professor
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
National Capital Region, Northern Virginia Center
7054 Haycock Road, Room 411
Falls Church, Virginia 22043

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