dr_tectonic: (Default)
[personal profile] dr_tectonic
Interesting economics fact from today's Coffee Talk:

The U.S. trade deficit has gone from about -150 G$ in 1998 to about -525 G$ today, which is, like, a LOT...

...unless you include the environmental costs of the trade, in which case the U.S. basically is able to avoid the implicit costs of CO2 emissions by exporting a significant chunk of them to China. That decreases the value of the U.S.-China trade deficit, and depending on how you price the CO2 emissions, can even wipe it out completely.

(And lest you think I know something about economics, the only reason this makes any sense to me is because the talk just finished, and it's still fresh in my brain.)

Date: 2004-12-21 07:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] melted-snowball.livejournal.com
AFAIK, costs of CO2 emissions are still completely unclear, since it requires a lot of depreciation to estimate them, which requires an estimate of inflation for the next 50+ years...