From the Wonk Room.
John Reilly’s April 14th
letter
to Rep. John Boehner (R-OH). Reilly explains that the
GOP continues to misrepresent his study, which
found that annual price for the average household for strong cap and
trade would start at $65 in 2015, averaging “about $800” through 2050.
Accusing Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist John Reilly of
using “fuzzy
math”
and “fuzzy logic,” the Weekly Standard has further distorted an
MIT study of the economics of carbon
regulation. By making an economically unsupportable assumption, Weekly
Standard editor John McCormack transforms a $3100 fabrication
promulgated by House Republicans into a $3900 fabrication:
While $800 is significantly more than Reilly’s original estimate of
$215 (not to mention more than Obama’s middle-class tax cut), it turns
out that Reilly is still low-balling the cost of cap and trade by
using some fuzzy logic. In reality, cap and trade could cost the
average household more than $3,900 per year.
In reality, the energy economist from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
who co-authored the “Assessment of U.S. Cap-and-Trade
Proposals”
report does a better job of interpreting “reality” than McCormack. It’s
McCormack’s logic that is “fuzzy.”
$3100?
The MIT study estimates the average value of
the carbon market over a thirty-five year period to be $366 billion per
year. If you were to divide that value by the number of households in
America, you get $3,128 per household. Asserting that the value of the
market is equivalent to the economic cost of the policy – which one has
to do to claim that the cost of cap and trade is $3100 per household—
requires the assumption that this revenue stream magically disappears
somewhere. Reilly attempted to explain this to the Weekly Standard:
It is not really a matter of returning it or not, no matter what
happens this revenue gets recycled into the economy some way. In
that regard, whether the money is specifically returned to households
with a check that says “your share of GHG
auction revenue”, used to cut someone’s taxes, used to pay for some
government services that provide benefit to the public, or simply used
to offset the deficit (therefore meaning lower government debt and
lower taxes sometime in the future when that debt comes due) is
largely irrelevant in the calculation of the “average” household.
Each of those ways of using the revenue has different implications
for specific households but the “average” affect is still the same.
For example: Exxon Mobil became the largest corporation in the world by
raking in $442.9 billion in revenue in
2008,
“costing” the average American household $3,785.
Is the existence of Exxon Mobil a $3,800 tax on American families? No,
because most of its revenues are redistributed in the economy—as oil
rig
employment,
petroleum products (which fuel transportation and trade), and of course,
multimillion-dollar salaries for its top
executives
and massive profits for its shareholders.
$3900?
The MIT study of the economic effects of cap
and trade did estimate the “welfare cost” of the transition from an
unsustainable pollution-based economy to a clean-energy economy. As
Reilly explained to McCormack (to no avail), this cost to the economy
involves all those actions people have to take to reduce their use of
fossil fuels or find ways to use them without releasing [greenhouse
gases]>
So that might involve spending money on insulating your home, or
buying a more expensive hybrid vehicle to drive, or electric utilities
substituting gas (or wind, nuclear, or solar) instead of coal in power
generation, or industry investing in more efficient motors or
production processes, etc. with all of these things ending up
reflected in the costs of good and services in the economy.
The MIT study found that this “welfare cost”
is tiny with respect to the size of the economy, even with strong
reductions in global warming pollution and a very high price for carbon
permits. The change in total welfare is less than one-tenth of one
percent in 2015, never rising above two percent for the forty-year run
of their model. Averaging out the “price” of a clean-energy economy
versus the status quo over those forty years, Reilly found the cost for
“the average household just in 2015 is about $80 per family, or $65 if
more appropriately stated in present value terms,” and the “present
value cost per average current household through 2050” is “about $800.”
McCormack decided to add $3100 to $800 and get $3900, even though Reilly
told him one has to assume the carbon market value gets flushed down the
toilet:
If you took the revenue and flushed it down the toilet or burned
it, the cost would then be the Republican estimate plus the cost I
estimate. But that is quite unrealistic, as the auction revenue
will be recycled into the economy some way.
Using McCormack’s logic, we could take our $3,800 Exxon Mobil “tax” and
then add in, say the $855 per household per year spent on the war in
Iraq (given a lowball estimate of $100 billion in total expenditures per
year) as the welfare cost of the existence of Exxon Mobil. Adding $3785
to $855 returns a figure of $4640 per average household.
Saying “Exxon Mobil is a $4640 tax” would be silly and intellectually
irresponsible. But that’s essentially what McCormack is doing, as is the
once-respected Heritage Foundation, who is promoting McCormack’s
nonsensical $3900
figure.