The Costs of Cap-and-Trade

I was thinking more about placing us in a position where we become unnecessarily dependent on someone else for

  • Energy
  • Food
  • High-value added manufactured goods, especially defense systems

When they could, in theory, be produced here if it wasn’t for governmental restrictions (Emissions, use of chemicals, trade restrictions on inputs).

Try Googling ‘Cato Institute Clean Air Act’. I just did, and a bunch of papers came up.

Oh, I see. Well, obviously energy works the opposite way. The bill is likely to make us more energy independent. I wouldn’t be too worried about food. But manufactured goods is interesting. You make an argument similar to one of the rationale’s of the auto bailout–we need the capability to make cars so we can convert that equipment and skills into wartime uses if need be.

I meant papers by academic economists, not partisan pieces. But I’ll see what CATO has to say.

Regarding domestic industry being hurt by foreign competition, the WTO gave their approval for using taxes on imported goods to account for the Chinas of the world who decide to drag their heels on reducing emissions.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d9d8ad2e-61e9-11de-9e03-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1

Right. I can see we are drifting into the sarcasm portion of the evening. Serves me right.

One of the reasons we are uncompetitive in auto manufacturing is that we are destroying it with one hand (UAW support, protectionism, and CAFE) whilst we subsidize it with the other.

If you think wind/solar and the other pie-in-the-sky fantasies being touted by the left are going to produce true energy independence from foreign sources in the next 50 years, you’re dreaming.

The two things that could move the needle in that time frame are coal and nuclear, and they of course are getting the short shrift from our current leaders in D.C.

None of my post was sarcasm.

Also, nuclear will get significant boost from this plan. You should read it.

Actually, you seem to have a profound lack of understanding of my comment.

I don’t have a problem with reducing emissions, I have a problem with a plan that in effect is a tax on the consumer for a misguided policy trying to cure an unproven problem.

Was the Emancipation Proclamation a tax on consumers of cotton? Not everything that raises a price is a tax. Calling it a tax is just empty political rhetoric that you should be embarrassed to repeat like it makes sense.

Call it what you will, the effect is still the same. Just because the politicians that support this don’t want (or have the balls) to call it what it is doesn’t change the result.