
Originally Posted by
S3ute
Lionel,
There may be the odd reader that puts your treatise down to some academic w__k_erism, but happily not I. I reckon you have raised a genuinely interesting point in what I take to be the central tenet - too easily substituting dollar values for human values.
In my own line of work, more by necessity, I travel among economists from time to time and in another context they seem to have the same bemusing urge to monetarise complex natural or human phenomenon.
Take conservation of the natural environment for example - the argument goes that if we don't place dollar values on landscape attributes like lookout vistas of considerable scenic beauty, wildlife habitat, general wildnerness etc the less-informed politicians and planners will discount them relative to tangible earners like farms, pipelines or sub-divisions. So, the economists have spent the last few decades coming up with clever ways to try to put monetary values on things that we rarely go out of our way to actually put monetary values on - mostly we just personally value those things and leave it at that.
Now suppose, by way of an example, that we could clear a 1000ha forest for new farms that might earn say $1 million a year, but in the process lose a nice stream to fishing, 500ha of extremely rare numbat habitat, a pleasant view that 500 people stopped to look at each weekend and so on. Suppose further that the economists have a crack at valuing the alternative and come up with something like that this might be worth $1.1 million a year if people reckon they would be willing to pay that much to stop it or have that added to next years' tax bill. Sounds rational because it seems like we are clearly being asked to choose between $1 million gain and $1.1 million loss. However, it always seems to me - silly perhaps - that this is a nonsense because beyond the rubbery figures (how many decimal places do you want) the thing we would be actually giving up is not $0.1 million (net) but rather a nice stream with fishing opportunity for the anglers, some rare habitat for numbat fanciers and what used to be a nice view - plus hopefully a few forest roads for the 4X4 folks. This is the real choice and aggegating it into money just blurs its real dimensions.
So, I am with you all the way on the need to look at the emotions behind the figures.
Apologies to anyone who think this was having a cheap go at land clearing, because I owned a farm and one of my limited and fading skills was pasture development. I could have made the farms worth $2 million a year.
Cheers,
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