Buy This Book

 

Hardcover $60.00 ISBN: 9781559638340 Published March 2001
Paperback $30.00 ISBN: 9781559638357 Published March 2001

RELATED BOOKS

  •  Common Ground on Hostile Turf
    Common Ground on Hostile Turf Lucy Moore
  •  Corporation 2020
    Corporation 2020 Pavan Sukhdev
  •  Why Corporation 2020?
    Why Corporation 2020? Pavan Sukhdev
  •  TSCA Deskbook, Second Edition
    TSCA Deskbook, Second Edition Carolyne R. Hathaway
  •  Environmental Justice
    Environmental Justice Barry E. Hill

Perverse Subsidies

How Misused Tax Dollars Harm The Environment And The Economy

 Perverse Subsidies
Bookmark and Share

Norman Myers and Jennifer Kent

240 pages | 6 x 9

Much of the global economy depends upon large-scale government intervention in the form of subsidies, both direct and indirect, to support specific industries or economic sectors. Distressingly, many of these subsidies can be characterized as “perverse” -- rather than helping society achieve a desired goal, they work in the opposite direction, causing damage to both our economies and our environments. Worldwide subsidies have long been thought to total $2 trillion per year, but until now, no attempt has been made to determine what proportion of that actually subverts the public interest.

In Perverse Subsidies, leading environmental analyst Norman Myers takes a detailed look at the subject, offering a comprehensive view of subsidies worldwide with a particular focus on the extent, causes, and consequences of perverse subsidies. He defines many different kinds of subsidies, from tax incentives to government handouts, and considers their wide-ranging impacts, as he:

  • examines the role of subsidies in policymaking
  • quantifies the direct costs of perverse subsidies
  • examines the major subsidies in agriculture, energy, road transportation, water, fisheries, and forestry
  • considers the environmental effects of those subsidies
  • offers policy advice and specific recommendations for eliminating harmful subsidies
.

The book provides a valuable framework for evaluation of perverse subsidies, and offers a dramatic illustration of the scale and dimensions of the problem. It will be the standard reference on those subsidies for government reform advocates, policy analysts, and environmentalists, as well as for scholars and students interested in the interactions between policymaking and environmental issues.

Google preview here