We'll Never Count All the Externalities
We'll Never Count All the Externalities
Externalities are everywhere, once you start looking for them. These are the costs (or, sometimes, the benefits) that accrue to those outside of an economic transaction who likely didn't consent to pay for them. I've written about them before, such as how WalMart profits by not having to pay for security services that are provided by local governments, how immigrant workers are exploited in order to provide products and services more cheaply, and how industry will never completely clean up the problems caused by burning coal, such as children poisoned by lead. The reach of externalities exceeds our grasp of how far their effects can range, but that doesn't mean we are released from our moral obligation to mitigate the suffering caused in the world for our benefit.The industrial system that provides us with cheap food is awash in externalities. For example, chicken has become about as cheap as decent bread, because the costs of raising a chicken are paid by others, such as the taxpayer whose money is used to subsidize farmers who supply cheap commodity corn feed and the environment that suffers damage from an oversupply of chicken poop at industrial farms. Farmers who raise chickens in a more responsible way incur more costs that are passed along to the chicken consumer, making their product seem more expensive. Which is the more responsible way to produce chicken? If you ask the shareholders, they'd probably say the responsible farmer is the one who creates the most profit for the shareholders.
Animal suffering and environmental damage are externalities not fully paid for by consumers of cheap industrial food. Photo by Alisha Vargas, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Sources:
Externalities are the norm, not the exception
You can buy a cheap chicken today, but we all pay for it in the long run
Why utilities have little incentive to plug leaking natural gas
None of the world’s top industries would be profitable if they paid for the natural capital they use
5 Helpful Answers To Society's Most Uncomfortable Questions
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.