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This interview originally appeared in the Belgrade News. It is reprinted by permission of the author.
In one corner are the “environmental wackos” — the tree-hugging activists who chain themselves to logging machinery to halt progress. In the other corner are the “greedy developers” — the bulldozing capitalists who don’t care two hoots about spotted owls.
Enter into the fray the Property & Environment Research Center (PERC) of Bozeman, Montana, which has been thinking outside the (recycled) box for nearly 30 years.
Their mission is to address green concerns through the free market and property rights, while highlighting the fact that government intervention often harms the environment. It’s an intriguing, even sane, concept. Dr. Terry L. Anderson, the executive director of PERC, explained how it can successfully work in a freewheeling question and answer session with Isabel Lyman. In addition to being a writer, lecturer, skier, fisherman, and hunter, Dr. Anderson is a Montana State University professor emeritus of economics — a modern renaissance man.
IL: What exactly is a free-market, pro-property rights environmentalist?
TA: Free market environmentalism is a way of creating environmental responsibility using property rights and markets. It has two tenets: 1) wealthier is healthier and 2) incentives matter.
The first refers to the fact that environmental quality improves as societies become wealthier. The second is captured in the phrase “No one washes a rental car.” Owning something rewards the owner for good stewardship and holds the owner liable if he harms others.
Consider property rights in the context of Yellowstone bison. Visitors to Yellowstone enjoy seeing the bison, but the National Park Service is not responsible for the “pollution” they cause if they transmit brucellosis to Montana’s cattle herd.
IL: So, in light of the above definition, what do market-oriented environmentalists think about the looming federal cap-and-trade carbon legislation?
TA: Cap-and-trade limits some activity (the cap) such as emitting SO2 or CO2 or fishing and allows the owner of the cap to use it or trade it. In the case of fishing, fishers are assigned a right to a share of the allowable catch. PERC research shows that this has improved fishery management by making fishers part owners in the resource. Instead of the fishery being like the rental car which no one washes, share owners have an incentive to be good stewards.
Applying cap-and-trade to CO2 is much more complicated than for fisheries. It is more difficult to set the caps; caps are more difficult to enforce, and the costs of controlling carbon are very high. These costs could amount to $2500 per household annually, and they would be disproportionately born by the poor.
IL: Do you have an opinion, yet, on the new U.S. Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar?
TA: Indications are that the Department of Interior will spend billions on alternative energy in an effort to offset limiting fossil fuel on public lands. I expect the red ink to flow, the energy produced to be small, and the environmental benefits to be trivial.
The Department is continuing to throw money at Indian reservation poverty. I wrote in the Wall Street Journal that poverty on reservations is due largely to the lack of property rights and the rule-of-law. To overcome these problems Salazar should give Indians property rights to their land and help them improve their court systems.
IL: What do you think the United States’ top environmental concerns will be during the next two decades?
TA: The top concern will be global warming, though I am skeptical that it ought to be.
My top concern is to find more and better ways to make improving environmental quality profitable, which is the only way to make it sustainable. PERC’s Enviropreneur Institute brings environmentalists together to learn how to apply free market environmentalism to real problems. The challenge is to replicate their success stories.
IL: On a personal note … what did you hunt in Africa?
TA: I’ve hunted most antelope species and have taken a Cape buffalo and a lion with my bow. Even there, free market environmentalism is at work. Most hunting in Africa rewards private owners for their stewardship because hunters and tourists pay for their experiences on private lands and native communal lands. The adage “if it pays, it stays,” is alive and well in Africa.
Dr. Anderson recently appeared on ABC’s 20/20 discussing endangered tigers.
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