Pollution and Environmental Problems
Lawsuits for Damages
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ One role of government in a market economy is enforcement of
property rights. You could sue harmful polluters if you owned property and
your property was damaged by pollution. Lawsuits may work fairly well when
pollution can be traced directly to a given polluter and the damage can be
shown to be caused by that party’s effluent. But
suppose a firm had the right to pollute. Your only remedy might be to pay the
firm to reduce pollution—if it were worth it to you. Who
has rights to use the environment? This was a crucial issue in the 1879 case
of Sturges
v. Bridgman. Sturges,
a doctor whose office abutted manufacturing space already occupied by
Bridgman, a confectioner, added an examination room next to the confectioner’s kitchen. Noisy equipment kept the doctor
from examining patients with a stethoscope in the new room, so he sued to
prevent the confectioner from operating the equipment. An injunction was
granted on the grounds that the machinery imposed external costs on the
doctor. (Consider the possibility, however, that this injunction imposed
external costs on the candy maker, who previously had the right to operate
noisy equipment.) Both
private and public lawsuits to protect the environment have some advantages. First,
victims of pollutants may be compensated for their losses—and
they may not have other enforcement methods. Firms have incentives to clean
up if the compensation paid exceeds the costs of cleaning up. Second,
successful lawsuits alert other polluters to new liability limits,
encouraging these firms to adopt cost-justified precautions to avoid future
damage claims. However,
such a method also has several disadvantages. Firstly, legal procedures are
slow and costly. Cases tried today have been initiated, on average, two to
four years earlier. Furthermore, such solutions are impractical if the
damaged party lacks the resources to bring a suit. These solutions alone may leave
society saddled with excessive waste. A slightly different problem is that if
there are numerous polluters and pollutees, it may be difficult to determine
who harmed whom and to what degree. Lawsuits would face almost insurmountable
difficulties in solving problems of fouled air in crowded industrial areas. On a
more positive note, legal precedents can alter the behavior of other firms,
which may reduce their emissions to avoid costly litigation. Legal remedies
work best where the number of polluters is small and their victims are few
and easily identified. And yet in areas like Love Canal, New York, and Times
Beach, Missouri, for residents who personally experienced the chaos of areas
polluted by toxic chemicals, it was nigh impossible for them to get
compensation for their losses. Fearful for their own health and that of their
children, and faced by plummeting property values and a maze of red tape when
they sought restitution, these victims learned how hard it can be to correct
the harm done by even easily identified polluters if the pollution happened
long ago. Regulations and Prohibition
Direct
regulation is a politically popular remedy for environmental damage. Complete
prohibition may be desirable in the case of extremely dangerous materials
(e.g., plutonium or other powerful carcinogens). When total bans on certain
pollutants are too costly relative to the benefits, the government limits
noxious wastes through regulations and standards. Regulation
is costly to administer and provides firms no incentives to reduce pollution
once a standard is met. Every stringent rule incites imaginative attempts to
discover loopholes around it. This typically results in an incredibly complex
patchwork of directives to prevent cheating or avoidance. In some instances,
there may be no acceptable alternatives to direct regulation. We need to
recognize, however, that the quality of life depends at least as much on
production and economic growth as it does on purity, and that there are
trade-offs between these goals. |
|
|
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Author: Ralph Byrns |
|
Economics
instructors and students are hereby granted provisional permission to use
these materials for educational purposes only. Commercial use of any of these
materials is forbidden. Withdrawal of this permission may be announced at
this site without notice, and these materials may not be used thereafter
without written permission. |
|
|