From a lot of knee-jerk responses in this thread, one would think that Wall Street has just privatized water or now has the ability to raise prices or deny people water.
No. Water is already bought and sold for money in California. Now a company allows for people to make bets on how those prices are expected to change. That's the development. Adjust your outrage accordingly.
Besides which, this is about farmers buying water by the acre-foot, not residential drinking water. It's also about trade within a watershed or water system, because moving large amounts of water for farming in any other way isn't economical.
Cities are always going to be able to outbid farmers, in some cases by buying farmland for the water rights. The worst-case result of that is that some farmers in dry areas go out of business and more food is imported.
Food is a global market, water isn't. It's easier to import food than water since it's much lighter for the price.
Many crops that are water intensive are exported. Almonds, for example. There’s no need to import food due to water shortages, only to prevent farmers from exporting our water by way of these (very profitable) water intensive exports.
To your point, municipalities are most definitely going to need to buy out farmers to prevent water resource depletion. They should do so whenever market conditions value these rights at a discount (“buy low”).
> Food is a global market, water isn't. It's easier to import food than water since it's much lighter for the price.
Exactly. These futures are a local market much closer to weather futures than fungible markets like crude oil or soybeans or even natural gas to a lesser degree, exactly because it's uneconomical to transport regular water over large distances. So these futures markets have little to tell us directly about anything other than local conditions in California. They allow local farmers to trade risk with other market participants such as speculators or the sellers of the water.
I also expect there's a lot of "oh no evil finance people profiteering out of water!", which is of course a gross misunderstanding of what futures are.
Futures are useful if you're a farmer: it helps you precommit to a certain price of water to be paid in the future. You might pay more than you would if the price goes down, but also less than would if the prices goes up. It's basically insurance.
In other words, in volatile markets it creates predictability. Farmers use futures for selling their produce. If we didn't have futures farmers would have no way to plan for the next year until they sold everything at the end of the year, which is very impractical. Instead they lock in their revenue and upgrade, repair, buy or sell equipment based on that. Since water is now a volatile resource it makes sense to do the same with that and lock in part of their expenses.
Umm what's the incentive or motivation behind making this trade able?
At first glance this seems incredibly concerning, especially if we ever get to a point where some people can 'afford' water while others can't.
While we don't need oil or gold for our immediate survival, they do play key roles into how our society operates. I'm hoping to understand more on why we should treat water in the same way.
> especially if we ever get to a point where some people can 'afford' water while others can't.
We are almost there. In Bangalore, India due to hockey-stick like expansion of houses, mainly high rise gated communities, the municipality is just not able to supply tap water. They all rely on daily supply of water tankers. However, even that water isn't potable. So house holds buy bottled water or have RO machines. Bear in mind, this is the situation for middle/upper-middle-income group. Lower income groups just drink any water they can, waterborne disease is rampant.
This[1] talk from P Sainath about the water crisis in India is revealing.
I would the situation would be similar in other emerging countries. I remember that a few months ago Cape Town, SA ran out of water[2]. Water was strictly rationed.
If the water tanker guys are able fulfill the deficiency, then you know that there is enough water. It's only that the waterworks aren't supplying enough so that people have no choice left but to pay the water tanker guys.
Municipalities in most of Urban India are hand in glove with these water tanker mafias.
Because we haven't commoditized it. People seem to be upset on one hand because we aren't making people buy water, and they turn around and express outrage at the notion that maybe water should be sold.
Yeah I doubt that much water is stolen from hydrants in the US. I have heard of business using it, but as I understood it they are required to get permitting and pay for usage by monitoring their flow, at least in California.
Usually it happens at the geographic fringes of civilization where cisterns/tanks get filled from municipal water supplies. Not people running a hose to their house.
But there’s also a lot of truck-delivered water used in construction/dust control.
Honest question: how do we know markets work better? Where would I start a quest to read peer-reviewed research of how markets are better than centralized planning in the 21st century, where have powerful computers that are capable of assimilating terabytes of information?
It's not just a matter of parsing lots of information, you also have to collect the information, and interpret it correctly. Maybe one day in the future, a real AI will be able to do better than markets (by what metric, though). But not yet.
Show me the computer program that knows how to create a pencil? And then a toaster? How does it know how many toasters will be needed? Is a toaster more important than a smart watch?
Also, if you have such a Computer program, you could use it to beat the markets. You could use it to compute the perfect prices of futures (because you know the future demand and supply). So I guess there is your answer: if you had such a Computer, you could beat the markets, as long as you don't do that, markets are better.
This is kind of one of those shocks most people will get when they goto those countries. Just as you said, even the well off have to fill up their water tanks daily and hope they don’t use it all up. I have no idea how everyone else gets by, but certainly in the west we simply take water for granted.
It is the exact reason I chose to live in a water rich part of the country/world. I live in an arid area for awhile and to me it just seemed like a death trap, your life is nearly 100% dependent on local infrastructure operating correctly and what little water resources you have not being bought up and sucked up by some large corporation to grow and sell some specialty crop.
Having lived in CO + TX (both states that get 'water restrictions'), never once did I worry about not having water to drink or bathe. They usually just ask us to conserve water and not water lawns so heavily in the summer. Not really comparable to countries where you need to plan to acquire and stock water for your family for daily use.
The aquifer under the plains states is expected to be depleted in the next 30 years due mostly to heavy agricultural use. So this could lead to additional restrictions or true rationing.
Agreed. We don't know the consequences of pushing Mountain West aquifers the way we have. There is good evidence we are pulling out more than is replenished and therefore are incurring a deficit.
What's more, we tend to think of the "West" as "won" but these states are mostly still growing as part of the American Westward expansion. A lot of Western State land only became easily accessible with the completion of the interstates in the 1960s 1970s and even 1980s. Therefore, the material abundance necessary for truly large scale populations to live in comfort has only come to these places in the last 40 years. This has caused a consistent population boom in some places which is not yet tapering and will lead to increased stress on these resources.
Fortunately (except for lawns and the like) water isn't destroyed or lost. Cities can take the output of their sewer systems and put it right back into the water towers. No city does that today, but only because the thought grosses people out, the water is safe and clean enough that they could.
I wonder if anyone has done an estimate of water losses in a home/day to evaporation (e.g. toilet bowl evaporation, humidifiers, drying laundry, drying dishes, etc.).
R/O is expensive. Tons of opportunities in the average home for re-use. Can use that shower/sink/laundry/dish water for toilets. A selective automatic bypass system could save the (mostly soapless) water to replace plant/garden watering (though that’s evaporation!).
A fairly large amount across a whole city, but compared to the amount of water run down the drain after use not a lot. Makeup water is needed for sure. However watering the lawn is one of the few that are significant enough to matter.
In the US at least if you are not treating it to drinkable the epa will stop you. Though where the epa tests is important, some times that means after it percolate through soil.
You do loose some of the bacteria, minerals, and trace elements though. But then again, those can be put back in with some ease. The problem comes when, like in Flint, the government decides to do really dumb stuff. I would not put it past some idiotic council to just pump raw sewage back into the water supply to save a dollar.
>What's more, we tend to think of the "West" as "won" but these states are mostly still growing as part of the American Westward expansion. A lot of Western State land only became easily accessible with the completion of the interstates in the 1960s 1970s and even 1980s.
On the one hand, this is true in a literal sense. On the other, there are as many people (~20M) in the SoCal triangle southwest of the Transverse Ranges as there are in the remainder of the Colorado and Great Basins (NV+AZ+UT+CO = ~20M) combined, yet we continue to ship water from Lake Mead and Owens Lake to Los Angeles. Improving the situation in California would take a lot of stress off of everyone else.
Flint Michigan, probably doesn't take their water for granted.... It's still not fixed. We've just all forgotten about it, and I read there's a lot of similar issues nationwide in other water jurisdictions because of fracking.
> Just as you said, even the well off have to fill up their water tanks daily and hope they don’t use it all up.
I thought this was a deliberate approach: the city would round-robin supply water and if you’re wealthy, you fill your tanks when it’s your turn, and if you’re not, you do all of your water consumption during those periods.
Keep in mind, there are also many illnesses and diseases that can be caused by inorganic content in water that no amount of boiling will make potable and can cause everything from poisoning to cancer long term (lead, etc).
To be fair, waterborne illness is very often organic related: microbes, viruses, bacteria, etc.
With the core factor being that there are more people than the water supplies can support. The solution here is a one-child or no-child policy, just as in China.
How do you know there's not enough water supplies?
In this case, it sounds like what's needed is better city planning and more equitable distribution of water. I don't know the specifics here, but I suspect there's plenty of water but it's probably being tied up in industrial applications.
Also, instead of letting the market decide where to build houses, why not build them where there's infrastructure to support them, instead of building them where the profit is highest?
Also, have you even considered what a one-child policy entails? It's forcibly sterilizing or aborting pregnancies.
The problem isn’t that there is no water supply, the problem is that Indian water supplies are incredibly low quality.
Over 70% of surface water in India is unpotable. The main problem is inadequate or non-existent waste water treatment, but agricultural and industrial runoffs also play a large part.
An area might run out of water, but the planet won't. The planet would run out of literally everything else before we run out of water.
It takes water to make a human. You will pass the point where you can't expand the population before you get to the point where you can't maintain the population that already exists. If something does decrease the water supply, you will in a short period of time have a smaller population to support. Such is the nature of carrying capacity.
Sure, but practically speaking there is a lack of potable freshwater in certain places. You can’t just stick a straw into the Indian Ocean and glug away.
It's a simple analysis - which is easier: bringing more water to where it is being consumed or moving the consumers to the water. In a wealthy area with a lot of stuff going for it, maybe a desalination plant makes perfect sense. Everyone in the city drinking non-potable water does so because they have judged it more practical than moving to a place with better water infrastructure.
If you get a million people to build a city in the Sahara and don't build any infrastructure to get water to this city, of course they are going to have water shortages, but this does not suggest some global water crisis nor is a limited birth rate going to fix the problem. Likewise if someone sticks their head in a plastic bag they may run out of air, but that doesn't mean air is any less abundant. There are some resources of which there is an actual scarcity such as arable land and energy sources, but water is not one of them.
There's certainly a regional crisis that will only probably get worse as climate change reduces snowpack in the Himalayas, the source of most water in India, China, and SEA. The problem with moving is threefold; moving to countries without water scarcity legally is not a realistic option for most Indians, cities are highly sticky, and new cities are incredibly hard to set up and set up well.
In fact, China is already considered to be suffering from water availability issues, and while this still happened with a one-child policy it almost certainly would be worse had Chinese population growth had the same trajectory as India's. (This is not an argument for the general good of one-child policy, and I do not endorse such a thing.)
The himalayas are the source of water for the region because it is abundant and cheap. Infrastructure to bring water in from more distant sources, desalination plants to generate more fresh water, wastewater treatment plants to recover more water, and changes to water use such as different agricultural methods which conserve water are all options to increase supply.
On the demand side, if moving is not legally or socially acceptable, what is the difficulty of changing the laws or culture? If cities are sticky, move the things that attract people to those cities elsewhere. If new cities are difficult to set up, how difficult is that compared to modifying an existing city?
there's a big difference between "there isn't any water" and "we won't take actions to get water." Now you may be saying "but those things are hard and expensive" to which I will respond "yeah, providing for the needs of 20% of the world's population is going to be hard and expensive," but on the brightside 20% of the world's population is an incredible resource if utilized properly.
Of course there's "technically" enough water, but that's academic pedantry at that point. There's technically no such thing as peak oil either, but there is a point where it becomes economically infeasible to produce more oil, which is what the point of the reserves statistic is. Reserves aren't all oil known in existence, they're all oil that is known to be feasibly economic to get.
The problem with new cities is generally trying to move employment. Unless there is a specific reason to move employers tend to like clusters of other employers. Most planned cities without a specific employment reason either fail or become big suburbs.
Making it easier to move to other countries is not exactly within the realm of possibility, given that India is not in control of how the US makes legislation and pressure would pretty much result in backlash that would probably make the situation worse, not better.
> Of course there's "technically" enough water, but that's academic pedantry at that point.
The GP comment I was responding to was specifically talking about water being "a real limit to how many humans this planet can support." Literally the first thing I said was that regions could run out of water. That said, how we frame our problems influences how we think about solutions - how we solve a water infrastructure crisis is very different from a water scarcity crisis.
> There's technically no such thing as peak oil either, but there is a point where it becomes economically infeasible to produce more oil
Peak oil is the point when the maximum rate of extraction of petroleum is reached, after which it is expected to enter terminal decline. Peak oil is most certainly real, and likely in the near future. Oil is an energy source and it takes energy to extract it - eventually you will hit a point where it takes more than a barrel of oil to produce a barrel of oil. Further, oil is destroyed when used, and it takes more energy to recreate it than you get from using it, so there is no sense in replenishing it. Conversely, you don't need to spend water to get water, nor does it cease to exist when you consume it. You can replenish a region's water supplies indefinitely.
> The problem with new cities is generally trying to move employment. Unless there is a specific reason to move employers tend to like clusters of other employers. Most planned cities without a specific employment reason either fail or become big suburbs.
If the companies won't move, tax them enough to build the infrastructure to support their employees. Either you'll have no problem getting them to relocate, or there will be no need to.
> Making it easier to move to other countries is not exactly within the realm of possibility, given that India is not in control of how the US makes legislation and pressure would pretty much result in backlash that would probably make the situation worse, not better.
1) The US is not the only country to move to, or even the best option
2) The US is a nation of immigrants which could most certainly be convinced to take immigrants from India with the proper incentive structure
3) As an emerging powerhouse, the assumption India has no negotiating leverage and is simply at the mercy of other nations seems extremely unfounded
As someone descended from poor subsistence farmers who moved to the other side of the planet to avoid famine, I am extremely skeptical of the claim that millions of people will just sit back and wait to die of dehydration as the water supplies dwindle. History is a long tale of people migrating to greener pastures when they are available and making pastures greener when they are not, and I see no reason that this time around will be any different.
And no, forced sterilization, as in the surgical procedure to permanently end the ability to conceive, is a thing.
More relevant, historical precedence in India:
> As the fertility rate began to decrease (but not quickly enough), more incentives were offered, such as land and fertilizer. In 1976, compulsory sterilization policies were put in place and some disincentive programs were created to encourage more people to become sterilized. However, these disincentive policies, along with “sterilization camps” (where large amounts of sterilizations were performed quickly and often unsafely), were not received well by the population and gave people less incentive to participate in sterilization. The compulsory laws were removed. Further problems arose and by 1981, there was a noticeable problem in the preference for sons. Since families were encouraged to keep the number of children to a minimum, son preference meant that female fetuses or young girls were killed at a rapid rate.[25]
No. The solution is to fix the water supply infrastructure so it can handle the current population.
Don't push politics and ideologies into things that have little to do with it. What you describe is the underlying problem, one that needs to be solved as well (though how, is another thing). But solving that, even today, won't bring water to the people who need it today.
And who is going to come in and fix this water infrastructure, the British?
The fact is that environmental conditions worsen each decade in India and quality of life is lower than in the 70s when the population was 555million (currently 1.3b).
Meanwhile the upper castes flee the country en-masse to the USA, Canada, Australia, Europe.
The Indian population will rise to 1.6b by 2050. It will be substantially easier to fix water infrastructure if this number was hundreds of millions lower. Population management is a bigger part of the solution than pipes and dams.
You talk about fixing water infrastructure like it is really hard (so hard you need the British to do it) and your alternative is to eliminate a significant potion of the population? You think that is easier? Not to even talk of the ethical concerns or the unintended consequences, just from a logistical standpoint, your statement is absurd. There is no way that is is easier to reduce a human population than it is to increase water availability. I don't usually attack people (and technically I'm only criticizing your statement, not attacking you directly) but when malthusians start talking I immediately know that they don't know what they're talking about.
And on an ethical note, managing populations is something you do with sheep and cattle, not human beings.
If you fix the problem today one day there will be 3 billion indians and you have to fix the problem again. It's much easier to reduce their reproduction rate through education and that education comes with other benefits.
People don't just have kids en masse without a reason. People historically had lots of kids for 2 reasons: a lot of them died before reaching reproductive age, and they needed more hands to produce food because most people lived in a subsistence agriculture environment.
The population boom over the last 100 years is not due to people reproducing too much, it is due to a decrease in child mortality, that and development from agricultural to industrial economies meant a cultural lag time in reducing the number of kids a woman has.
Once you have an industrial economy, the pressure then becomes to have less kids. You don't need to be told in a classroom to do that, it happens naturally. If you need proof, these education programs didn't exist in the west during development into industrial economies and yet the fertility rate decreased simply due to economic pressures.
A fertility rate of 2.3 (the .3 accounting for child death and people who don't ever have kids) is replacement rate. At that rate population does not increase.
Long story short, at least in cities (where the water shortage we are talking about is happening) you won't see a doubling of the population due to sustained fertility. So the shortages you see of water and other resources can be entirely attributed to inefficient resource allocation, and once capacity is increased to match population you won't have to worry about it again and again.
> A fertility rate of 2.3 (the .3 accounting for child death and people who don't ever have kids) is replacement rate.
This is a good point which often gets overlooked in the heated debate of population explosion.
Coincidentally just a year or two ago Indian growth rate reached replacement levels[1]. As per the latest data (not sure if it's been reviewed/confirmed) it's now slightly below the replacement levels.
Also, if you notice, the southern states's growth rate is well below that of replacement level.
I would say the debate is more accurately about distributing resources to an "exploding" amount of people. Bringing up the entire population of India (just as an example, could be any country) to the living standards that are commonly discussed (such as potable water, sufficient nutrition, healthcare, etc) could very well be practically impossible.
Yep, when I make the argument that "the problem is resource allocation, not overpopulation" I don't mean to imply that resource availability can be instantaneously ramped up locally with an influx in population, there is obviously latency there, and there will be a lag in standard of living during a sharp population increase. But this isn't a permanent state due to there being too many people.
I don't think it is impossible to bring the projected population of India up to decent living standards, I think this is highly unlikely, but my point doesn't account for that, so it could very well be.
> You don't need to be told in a classroom to do that, it happens naturally
That's just a theory, and if you're wrong, then what? A description of what you think will happen needs better evidence. At least one other factor is religious/cultural inertia encouraging people to have lots of children, and that is somewhat characteristic/unique for each given culture s.t. you can't really generalise it too much.
There was a similar theory about non-democracies being unstable (Democratic peace theory, wrt greater public wealth), and how free trade liberates nations. How did that turn out for Chinese superpower?
China is an emerging superpower, and economic powerhouse, and anti-democratic to the extend of suppressing democracy in HK. It also does lot of trade that never seems to encourage an increase in civil liberties.
Now, maybe the theory was all an illusion caused by the domination and coercive power, of existing democratic nations.
You have a good point. I'd say educating women (and people in general) is a good idea generally speaking, and so could potentially help in this regard if what I said is wrong, so it doesn't hurt. But I do believe that people who have resources to support 3 people don't deliberately have 10 kids, that's the economic pressure that I'm relying on, I'd say accidental births would be more of a factor here than inertia due to cultural norm. Contraceptive technology IMO is more important.
It's true education is the gift that keeps on giving, but India is already at replacement levels of fertility, its age 0-19 population has already peaked and is in decline, and its population will top out around 1.75 billion.
Their issue here is poor governance, economic inequality, and climate change.
"Family planning" suggests agency. Humans have agency. The comment I'm responding to explicitly recommends forced reduction in fertility rates, removing agency, something you don't do to human beings unless you think of them like sheep or cattle. Equating a one or no child policy with "family planning" is extremely disingenuous.
Any law that tells human beings how many children they are allowed to have is fascism, yes. Any directive telling human beings how they have to reproduce is eugenics by definition.
> Any directive telling human beings how they have to reproduce is eugenics by definition.
It could be dysgenics, depending on what the instructions are. :-P How about private charities that provide voluntary incentives for some people to self-sterilize and others to have more kids? How about private charities that subsidize birth control and abortions? How about friends and family encouraging people to marry someone smart, or telling people with genetic disorders that they should adopt? Do you draw a line somewhere in the above between "eugenics" and "not eugenics"? I think your line would be far from universal. dictionary.com says "the study of or belief in the possibility of improving the qualities of the human species or a human population", which would indeed encompass all of the above. I'm afraid the word "eugenics", like "fascism", has been corrupted into "something whose exact definition is unclear, but it's definitely a bad thing".
> Any law that tells human beings how many children they are allowed to have is fascism, yes.
So what is there to prevent some people from having 10 children, every generation, until the system collapses under their weight? If you say "it's the parents' responsibility to provide for the kids, and if they don't manage to do so from their own resources or persuade anyone else, then the kids may starve and that will limit the process", then, fine, that would work; though many people think the state should always prevent kids (or perhaps people generally) from starving, and I think policies with that effect have been enacted even in the U.S., and I doubt they will get repealed anytime soon.
You say that people with increased access to education and health and such naturally reduce their birth rates. That may be. But I think it would be only a matter of time before they got selected for impulsivity, high libido, inclination to adhere to the parents' religion that says to maximize children, or whatever other traits would lead to a bunch of people actually having tons of kids they can't support. (Perhaps the singularity and/or genetic engineering and/or other stuff will happen and make that irrelevant long before it becomes an issue.) Maybe those traits would also lead to doing things that land them in jail for years, getting a reproductive penalty that way; I dunno if that would be enough.
Alright, it isn't exactly eugenics, it is one step removed from eugenics. Telling people how many children they can have is one step away from telling them who they're allowed to have them with.
> So what is there to prevent some people from having 10 children, every generation, until the system collapses under their weight?
The fact that if they can't feed those children those children will die and the standard of living of their other children will be significantly reduced. Natural economic pressure handles this problem already.
>You say that people with increased access to education and health and such naturally reduce their birth rates. That may be. But I think it would be only a matter of time before they got selected for impulsivity, high libido, inclination to adhere to the parents' religion that says to maximize children, or whatever other traits would lead to a bunch of people actually having tons of kids they can't support.
That's more speculative than anything I've said so far, everything I've said so far has a historical example to reference. Even if that were to happen, not bring able to support the people you create means reduced standard of living, and therefore reduced resource consumption, at best. Again, the problem is self correcting.
"Natural economic pressure handles this problem already."
This is not how people works. I have seen people who gives 10 children due to religion thing. Sure the quality life is low but they don't care. There children are also doing same thing. You may be open to ideas but many religious people don't think like that. They will simply trade low quality life thinking more children brings more money.
>Equating a one or no child policy with "family planning" is extremely disingenuous.
meh, not really. The OP may have worded it bluntly but the distribution of free contraceptives, access to birth control is just the 'nudging' version of the same thing. I always find it a little bit hilarious how you can reframe population politics in terms of some technocratic wonk policy or language and then it's total cool, whereas just doing a one-child policy is evil despite having virtually the same goal
I was basing my response on what was clearly stated. You can't just reinterpret what someone else said for them. There is a big difference between "distribution of free contraceptives" and "one child policy" and you can't wiggle your way around that.
I didn't reinterpret what they said, I argued that you overestimate how much of a difference there is in both policy outcome and intention. What's the difference other than the branding? Women have fewer kids and they enter the workforce. The demographic development in China doesn't even look much different than in South Korea, in fact they have even fewer kids in SK.
In 'free' societies when governing elites want a policy outcome they dress it in women's liberation and rights language, put a tax on something or hand you a subsidy to remind you of what you're supposed to do, in China they don't give a crap and send you somewhere by fiat. tomato tomahto
The difference is forcing people do do something vs giving them options and letting them decide. I don't know how many more times I need to explain myself. People have agency. Authoritarianism denies our agency and defies us to use it. That is how you treat cattle, not human beings.
Liberalism at least in its modern technocratic version isn't any different. You're offered an illusion of choice and then you're 'incentivized' (every policy makers favourite word in the free world) to choose the correct thing. The beauty of it is of course that it, in contrast to authoritarianism, obfuscates existing power relations, because if you have choice there's nobody you can attack or hold responsible, you're always responsible yourself.
In that sense authoritarianism actually treats you less like cattle, because authoritarians think highly enough of their subjects to actually perceive them as a threat. The modern western technocrat on the other hand pretty much just thinks everyone's a number in an excel sheet.
your alternative is to eliminate a significant potion of the population
managing populations is something you do with sheep and cattle, not human beings.
using the word "eliminate" and 'treating people like cattle' isn't consistent with merely incentivising them to not have children.
> The comment I'm responding to explicitly recommends forced reduction in fertility rates, removing agency
where does it? It's a comment previous that the same poster talks about Chinas 1cp, and as I understand it, it was implemented as a fine for having more than one child.
Do punitive fines, and tax/welfare incentives/disincentives count as being "forced" or "non-agency"?
> Any law that tells human beings how many children they are allowed to have is fascism, yes.
I disagree. Point me to a commonly accepted definition of fascism that agrees, without requiring too much subjective interpretation. Anyone can have their own notion of what constitutes freedom/oppression etc.
> Any directive telling human beings how they have to reproduce is eugenics by definition.
Again, show me that definition. Most that I've seen limit the choice of who can procreate. A flat rule of 1-child applied to everyone equally doesn't seem to apply to me as there is no differentiation based on genetics. But in any case, a rose by any other name: deciding something fits a definition doesn't really change the semantics, so it doesn't really make any difference, especially if you are using a special-case, or non-standard application of the definition (e.g. like arguing abortion is bad based on whether it counts as murder, or not).
"Fascism" is interchangeable with "authoritarisnism" in common usage, and the comment I was responding to used it in this manner. Strictly speaking I suppose it is authoritarianism, not fascism.
Managing populations does not have to include killing people. China's one child policy strictly and explicitly prohibited couples from having more than one child. You're softening the definition of what I was responding to to discredit my response.
Fascism is commonly confused for authoritarianism but I don't consider them interchangeable. If it's common to conflate them, then I consider this a common fallacy.
I consider Fascism as authoritarianist, but not necessarily the other way around: there are plenty communist regimes that are authoritarian (including maybe China) but that are not considered Fascist.
> China's one child policy strictly and explicitly prohibited couples from having more than one child
Sure, but you seem to assume what this means. I don't read what you assume into the original post. Again, what about Chinas 1cp specifically do you believe to be fascist and/or immoral?
> Population management is a bigger part of the solution than pipes and dams.
"Population management" is a road leading straight to ethical catastrophes, to murder and other horrible forms of suffering. There have been many of these - genocides, "Lebensraum im Osten" aka Nazi Germany invading Eastern Europe, the Holocaust, China's "1 child policy".
The best way a society can handle population management is fact-based sex education and safe, cheap access to contraceptives and medical abortion, and general access to healthcare and a social security network so that people don't have to have half a dozen children if they want one or two to survive to adulthood and care for them at old age.
You can say that about anything: socialist policies, "no-tolerance" policies, anything that looks like censorship.
You say there have been many such example, then trot out Nazi Germany; The fact the Nazis purposefully initiated a genocide (the holocaust) out of hatred out the Jews undermines the suggestion that there was a genuine attempt at population management.
Chinas also has a pretty poor human rights example, aside from it's 1-child policy.
Do you have any example of a modern (first-world, developed) country with a good human-rights record, and QOL index pursuing population management?
india will run out of resources(and water) before population hits a peak. depopulation is a statistical guarantee. reducing population voluntarily is the only way to assure a reasonable stock of the gene pool before the country completely runs out of resources and scarcity escalates into wars of depopulation(historically, it has been proven that war always follows drought or famine on a larger scale..from genghis khan to african tribes to vikings to the last syrian war, if you can collect enough data sets about world famine/droughts/scarcities, wars always follow.)
now..how to go about it. its a multi pronged approach:
1. stop incentivising children. what does this mean? instead of punitive measures or coercive one child policy, the state should incentivise responsible procreation and reward the child free. like an UBI for those who dont contribute to population growth.
2. provide free preservation of genetic material(sperm/eggs/dna) in a gene pool databank for posterity. this may not mean anything. it may amount to something. the idea that a 'legacy' might have a chance in a better world through frozen dna is a perk. it is a small cost and a nice gesture to reward selfless action for the nation. also: who knows what we might need in 300-500 years later.
3. go back to village or rural economies. by this, i dont mean that indians should start turning back time wrt sci and tech. what i mean is that people should go back village size communities. these have to be self governing and self sustaining units that can manage their own resources.
4. diversity is a double edged sword. i am not talking about social diversity, but diversity of resource expenditure and resource scarcity. there are too many people in india and to a certain extent, more cohesion and homogeneous living/way of life will give smaller communities more agency over how they manage local resources.
example: a meat eating population has a different resource expenditure pattern than a vegetarian/dairy inclusive one. rural communities differ from urban community's needs. droughty areas have different management starategies than those with monsoons.
5. it's very easy wrt water. dig more ponds and save rain water. protect watersheds and prevent ag/industrial runoffs. adopt 'nile valley' model of digging canals. take whatever you grow indoors into hydroponic systems. india still gets a lot of rain during the monsoons. development of rural areas and relieving the pressure in urban density will help. but only if there is a limit on the number of people per resource budgeted zone.
6. more importantly..before the depopulation occurs due to scarcity of resources, there is a real danger for india. if the wet bulb temperatures[1]rise as predicted, the heat and humidity will kill people in their sleep. they'd go to bed and die in their sleep.[2]
[..]He and his colleagues previously looked at how heat waves would evolve with warming in the Middle East and found that region will likely be home to the highest wet-bulb temperatures the world will see. (Bandar Mahshahr in Iran hit a wet-bulb temperature of nearly 95°F during a 2015 heat wave, which translates to a heat index of about 163°F (73°C).) But South Asia poses the bigger concern in terms of threats to people, as it is home to one fifth of the world’s population and is an area of deep poverty.
“That combination is what makes, what shapes this acute vulnerability,” Eltahir said.
Eltahir and his colleagues found that if greenhouse gas emissions continue on their current trajectory, parts of eastern India and Bangladesh will exceed the 95°F threshold by century’s end and most of South Asia will approach that threshold.
If emissions are substantially curtailed and global temperature rise meets the 2°C (3.6°F) limit agreed to in the Paris accord, no place in South Asia would exceed 95°F, though wet-bulb temperatures over 88°F would be widespread. Such temperatures can still be deadly, especially to already vulnerable populations like the elderly.[..]
>6. more importantly..before the depopulation occurs due to scarcity of resources, there is a real danger for india. if the wet bulb temperatures[1]rise as predicted, the heat and humidity will kill people in their sleep. they'd go to bed and die in their sleep.[2]
Yeah but people have a survival instinct. They won't just say"Hey, it's so hot I will die before I wake up. Let's go to sleep!". They'll go somewhere where they won't die. They will go to where we are...
it will not take days and months. one heat wave will kill hundreds of thousands of people in their sleep.
and how and where will a few hundred million people migrate?
[..]Currently, about 2 percent of the Indian population is occasionally exposed to extreme wet-bulb temperatures (between 89 and 94 degrees). According to a 2017 study, by 2100 that number could increase to 70 percent. [..]
https://scroll.in/article/931865/the-human-body-cant-cope-in... : Human body can’t cope infinitely with rising temperatures – and in India, it is close to its limits
At a certain temperature, sweat stops evaporating – shutting down the body's cooling mechanism, causing death. Parts of the world are already there.
When the air temperature exceeds 35 degrees Celsius, the body relies on the evaporation of water – mainly through sweating – to keep core temperature at a safe level. This system works until what is called the wet-bulb temperature reaches 35 degrees Celsius. The wet-bulb temperature includes the cooling effect of water evaporating from the thermometer and so is normally much lower than the normal dry-bulb temperature reported in weather forecasts.
Once this wet-bulb temperature threshold is crossed, the air is so full of water vapour that sweat no longer evaporates. Without the means to dissipate heat, our core temperature rises, irrespective of how much water we drink, how much shade we seek, or how much rest we take. Without respite, death follows – soonest for the very young, elderly or those with pre-existing medical conditions.
Wet-bulb temperatures of 35 degrees Celsius have not yet been widely reported, but there is some evidence that they are starting to occur in South West Asia. Climate change then offers the prospect that some of the most densely populated regions on Earth could pass this threshold by the end of the century, with the Persian Gulf, South Asia and most recently the North China Plain on the front line. These regions are, together, home to billions of people.[...]
> And who is going to come in and fix this water infrastructure, the British?
Seems like the Brits have done a lot, historically in Indian and China, but have their hands full at the moment with Brexit to reunite the "kingdom." My money is on the Chinese and their scientists in exchange for concessions that will further isolate the United States due to xenophobic thinking some people in the states perpetuate. How long before "their" water born illnesses become our airborne viruses?
This seems like a comment by someone who lacks a basic knowledge of Indian/Chinese relations but has an axe to grind against America. India and China are constantly saber rattling over turf wars and other geopolitical issues, and India withdrew from the recent Chinese-led RCEP free trade agreement over concerns that China would compromise their economic sovereignty.
India could undergo governmental reform and hire, say, German experts (or Indian experts!) to help revitalize their water infrastructure. Just illustrating a scenario where things change for the better and neither China nor America is involved whatsoever.
India has more than enough smart people to design and build everything they need. Labor is cheap there too, so they can dig in pipes everywhere cheaply.
The things that need to be done are public knowledge or easy to find out. Most of the west already does it, and has been for one hundred years or so. There is nothing magical about turning bad water into clean drinkable water. All that India is lacking is the will (probably because of money or corruption - both real problems).
BS. They just don't want to be part of a new "kingdom".
Brexiteers don't trust EU politician, but they also don't trust UK politicians.
> My money is on the Chinese
Chinese aggression isn't much better than US "xenophobic thinking", plus India has pretty good contacts with Europe and other south-Asian countries. Plus there is a large and influential Indian population in the US, I'd be surprised in The Indian population in China are half as influential.
The fact that you're recommending a one child or no child policy with a one sentence statement tells me you've never even done even high level research on the topic of population dynamic or resource allocation.
The one child policy has been disastrous for China. Imagine a whole generation of people that have no siblings, cousins, aunts or uncles (after 2 generations of one child policy). The social fabric in China has been gutted by this policy. Also it means that after 1 generation of this policy the number of working people is significantly less than the number of retired people. It destroys economic output and ability to care for a population, the oldest people suffer in a system like this, and younger people spend more of their earnings taking care of older people than improving their lives, so living standards stagnate or go down, you wind up with less resource availability.
A no child policy leads to extinction after one generation. You don't even need to do research on anything to know this, just simply thinking about what you're saying for a moment works.
A reduction in population does not increase resources available to people. Resources must be produced by people, a reduction in population also reduces that output. For historical proof, look at the numerous examples of famines that occurred in previous centuries, when there were less than a billion people on earth, by your logic life should've been more plentiful throughout history until recently but the opposite is actually the case, because resource availability scales with production capacity, it does not simply decrease with demand pressure.
GDP/productivity scaled with population PRE-INDUSTRIALIZATION. It's why China historically occupied greatest share of global GDP, it simply had greater proportion of global population. GDP then was also proportionally accounted by subsistent farming. Civilization was built on the little bits of surplus left over. Post-industrialization, capital has been gradually accumulating line share of productivity. It's how US accounted for 40% of global GDP with 6% of world population post-war. Post-automation, you simply do not need that much labour for large scale widget factories. Nor do you need that many farmers. There is now a curve where excess people becomes a drain.
In China's case, even at the height of pre-automation manufacturing economy, the manufacturing sector accounted for 400M jobs. 300M work in agriculture, kept deliberately deindustrialized (until recently) specifically as a jobs program. Today, 600M subsist on less than 2000 USD per year. These are excess people. What do these numbers mean? World demand was/is literally not enough of uplift 1.4B Chinese out of poverty. That's simply too many people. The sooner China can settle at 800M (2100 estimate) the better. There's literally not enough resources in the world for China to consume much above middle income, let alone high income like the west. If everyone consumed like US we would need 5 earths. China is 1/5 of global population.
Long term, One Child Policy was the better moral calculus despite social ramifications, i.e. demographic bomb, which TBF is blown out of proportion. It's better to be less populous and rich than the alternative. At minimum wealth allows you to import cheap surplus labour to take care of aging populations, which China should be able to arbitrage internally due to income disparity. Family Planning and crudely, millions dead under Mao worked in China's favour (well minus purging experts). The alternative is geometric population explosion to support successive generations. We know from overpopulation studies that this is fundamentally a self terminating system that will exceed carrying capacity of Earth.
It is impossible to exceed the carrying capacity of the earth. Let me explain why.
Every human being alive is made up of biomass, which means that the meat that people are made up of was once animals and plants, also eating, also drinking water. So the idea that food and water shortages are caused by increase in human population is simply not possible. It is not possible for there to be more people than there are resources to create them in the first place.
The only real difference is that human beings consume industrial goods and excess consumption caused by increase in standard of living (for example flushing toilets, something animals and plants do not do). But even considering these things, they're due to an increase in standard of living which can only come from an increase in production. In aggregate, humans cannot consume more than we can produce. So it follows that an increase in population that causes resource shortages can only lead to a reduction in living standards, and only down to the living standards of a subsistence agrarian society. Overconsumption of resources then is a self correcting problem.
Now, suppose human beings could exceed the earth's carrying capacity, which I have just showed you is not possible. This would cause many human beings to die from starvation, as the decrease in living standards would take us below the standard of living of subsistence agriculture in this hypothetical scenario. Even in this extreme case, it is still a self correcting problem. There is no need to artificially correct it.
Any and all problems that appear to stem from overpopulation are actually resource allocation problems, inefficiencies in resource distribution. The problem with China is not that the resources cannot be produced to support the population, the problem is that the resources are inefficiently distributed, in part because a centrally controlled economy cannot possibly distribute resources more efficiently than a distributed (or free market) economy, but that is a different discussion.
> It is not possible for there to be more people than there are resources to create them
People can have different daily-intake requirements as children versus adults, plus a growing populations consummation can temporarily exceed food production by burning trough food stores. Also, local food production can vary, place to place, season to season - what's sustainable during a good year, might not be during a bad one.
Plants and animals can eat and drink things humans can't; e.g. a plant is fine with muddy, faeces-contaminated water, it would even thrive on it. Livestock may happily eat grass/straw long-term.
The killing of one cow won't feed a human for the rest of their lives - multiple cows are needed to provide constant food, and the cow population may as such increase along with the human population.
When the rate at which the cows are eating grass is faster than the rate at which the grass grows, your population is unsustainable, and you will eventually not be able to feed everyone. The only sense in which it's "impossible to exceed the carrying capacity of the earth" is that when you do, people will die.
So I should elaborate, global overpopulation is impossible. Local overpopulation and resource shortages are possible, but this is not due to too many people (as the resources exist somewhere on earth to support them) but due to inefficient resource management.
Local shock increases in population are due to migration, not birth rate explosion, since birth rate follows resource availability. And again, a sudden migration from one place to another of large numbers of people (which we see in urbanization) is another example of inefficient resource allocation.
The increase in resource demand from a person as they grow into adulthood is a consideration, but an indicator that resources are strained is child mortality. The fact that it is decreasing worldwide tells us that we are not at the edge of carrying capacity. Even if we were, the result would be either decreased standard of living or increased child mortality, and thus the problem self corrects. My assertion again is that human population cannot exceeded carrying capacity globally.
Some creatures can consume resources that humans need to process before consuming, but in aggregate the amount of biomass stays the same and so the resources are always available. It is a question of production, not availability. An increase in livestock that depletes the food store of the herd is essentially the same scenario as a local increase in population of humans that strains locally available resources. And like I pointed out talking about that scenario, the issue is inefficient resource allocation, not overpopulation.
The inefficient resource allocation happened because of overpopulation. Managing resource of 1 million is easy but 1 billion (Hello Hello?) is not easy.
And the issue is quality life. Do you think many people from India/China can have same quality of life like that of US? No.
Just tell me how would u make efficient resource allocation? The world simply doesn't demand excess population. When there is more population resources must be shared and when resources are shared quality of life decreased leading to all sort of problem.
Well, first of all, I demonstrated how this extreme case is impossible, but let's address war.
In such a world where there are too many people, we get suggestions such as instituting a one child policy, forced sterilization, outward extremists even discuss culling populations. What's the difference between that and war? The difference is, in war you have agency. War happens organically between people. An authoritarian solution takes agency away entirely. People are not free to be people, but you wind up with, best case scenario, the same result with regard to resource management. So yes, even in extreme circumstances where war is a response to resource shortages, it is still a preferable outcome to authoritarianism.
>It is impossible to exceed the carrying capacity of the earth. Let me explain why.
>Well, first of all, I demonstrated how this extreme case is impossible, but let's address war.
Did you happen to be an engineer working on the design or marketing of the Titanic in a past life? You sure sound like it. You also sound like you have not once ever grown a plant.
You can go from perfectly green and healthy to dead in a week if you don't pay attention. A seed can flourish just fine, only to eventually die as the energy burden required for it to thrive is no longer met. If this happens before you go to seed, congratulations, your population of plants just went extinct due to breaching the carrying capacity of their environment.
Try raising an orchid some time. I guarantee you'll learn something. One of the Vanilla ones in particular is best.
Your arguments are naive and reek of "not my problem" type thinking. You may believe that carrying capacity is a a priori defined as "I'm here, therefore not exceeded" but it isn't.
We're all hot-house flowers who are facing the possibility of the gardener (humanity collectively) just saying "screw it" and destroying our chances at continued success.
And war... War'll happen, and calling that a systemic self-correction is both callous and wretched beyond all reason. Nevermind that no one tends to factor in environmental damage that occurs as a result of warfare.
Again, I need to point out that this extreme example is hypothetical for the sake of discussion and I've established that it is not possible. I'd like to stay on topic so I'm not going to get deep into why I think this, I allude to my reasoning in my previous comment, but I disagree that war is authoritarianism. That isn't to say war is good.
Authoritarianism is my countries leaders trying to impose their will on me. War is some other countries leaders trying to impose their will on me. Not sure I like either option.
Your broad point seems to be problem will fix itself, but that's not very illuminating. Self correction spans the spectrum of manageable to disastrous. Carry capacity / resource availability has temporal element and is not stable, allocation today may not be sustainable or available tomorrow. Mismanaged environmental cycles means feast or famine i.e. fisheries / soil poorly managed and becomes increasingly unproductive or oil / water reserves tapped faster than new discoveries or replenishment. Disaster when you cannot efficiently distribute what's no longer there due to poor planning and foresight. Self correction could be preemptive population management or feast or famine cycles. One is more preferable than other for stable society. IMO free market is not capable of planning on such long timelines. Some problems become sufficiently large and long spanning that only state can handle, i.e. national defense is state directed, even if frequently poorly optimized in terms of resource allocation. Private military / industry could exist under free market but works within superstructure set by state.
My broader point is that there is no problem to fix, human population cannot possibly exceed the carrying capacity of the earth.
Looking at recorded human history, the long term trend consistently is that the population has risen. This means resource availability has increased, either due to discovery of new sources, invention, efficiency increase. Shocking decreases in some or other resource have had little effect on this trend.
Unavailability of some resource just means reduction in standard of living, for everything except food and water. And again, the net biomass on earth does not increase the more humans are here, and so the demand for food and water does not change whether that biomass is humans or buffalo. There can be no food or water shortages from overpopulation, only mismanagement and natural disaster.
The free market is the only thing capable of handling shocks, no other system is flexible or agile enough to quickly resolve a change in resource availability or demand. And sudden change of resource availability is not what we are talking about, we are talking about resource shortage due to overpopulation. A shock decrease in resources would result in disaster no matter how many people exist, so trying to address it by managing population levels is pointless.
> Looking at recorded human history, the long term trend consistently is that the population has risen. This means resource availability has increased, either due to discovery of new sources, invention, efficiency increase. Shocking decreases in some or other resource have had little effect on this trend.
I've been filling this bucket with water, and it's never overflown. Therefore the bucket can contain infinite water.
Free market economics don't work so well when the biggest players decide to augment their value proposition with the barrel of a gun. Available biomass is not the relevant metric when determining the carrying capacity of the earth, with the obvious caveat that by carrying capacity, we mean some definition that includes the continuation of modern society.
>I've been filling this bucket with water, and it's never overflown. Therefore the bucket can contain infinite water.
I'd say a more apt comparison to the point I'm making is "I've been filling this bucket with after and it's never overflown, and it appears that there is no way to overfill the bucket and exceed it's carrying capacity." I never said anything about continuous population growth, in fact, my point is that it is not possible to grow the population beyond the carrying capacity.
The consensus is that giving women roles other than child rearing reduces the birth rat far more effectively than an outright ban. The other factor would be to pave all the damn dirt roads. Teenagers in Cameroon do dirt road maintenance as their summer job. It's a complete waste of effort but it encourages parents to have children.
The birth rate in India is not particularly high, at 2.x, and my anecdotal experiences of travelling and working there is that younger couples prefer to have fewer children, only 1 or 2. Of course the population is already large, but that's unlikley to get much smaller in the short to medium term, so is hardly a useful suggestion.
You need so little water for drinking that it's essentially free or close to free.
Properly trading water is more important for industry and agriculture. And I'd be very happy, if some very 'thirsty' crops like almonds or industrial applications would stop because they might not be profitable once you take the full cost of water into account.
The alternative is what you see eg in California, where residential users of water often face severe restrictions, but many agricultural users have grandfathered water rights that they have to squander to keep.
For almonds you have to frame it about where that water is coming from, ie dairy from outside California may be less impactful. So the question should be whether futures will help sourcing water better in some sense
Side thought: on things using way too much water, it's always amusing that more water goes into producing bottles as opposed to the water content in a bottled water
I worked in remote sensing 2012-2014 and we had an agriculture customer base in California.
The problem I saw with nut trees, is during the drought nuts became far more profitable, largely because they are not drought resistant. So, a lot of farms were replacing the more traditional, regional, drought-resistant plants (hay, alfalfa, soy?) with nut trees that would take 5-8 years to mature and use way more water.
What do you mean when you say nut trees are less drought resistant than Soy?
Both crops are based on pumped water. Trees can survive on 10% water for a year but wont bear fruit or make a profit. The other crops cant be grown on 10% water. You simply don't plant alfalfa if you don't have the water.
Have you ever seen an almond in the wild? It's basically the the thing inside of the pit of a fruit like nectarine or plum. The fleshy part of the fruit, which is quite moist and watery, gets thrown out.
> If a almond takes the same amount of water per calorie as a strawberry, does it matter that it has a husk?
No. But it sounded like you were surprised that almonds were so consumptive it the first place. I don't know off the top of my head that they are consumptive relative to any given metric, but it shouldn't be surprising that they are, considering how almonds "work" and how much they are produced in CA.
Especially since you compared against wine. Wine can be extremely drought tolerant; there are wine fields in california that are only watered for the first season of growth and the remaining productive years are sustained by waters from the local aquifers (rainfall).
I am continually surprised because I grew up in an agricultural area and know almonds are not particularly water consumptive when compared to other crops commonly grown in california, like grapes or or strawberries. Grapes and Beef both take more water per calorie than almonds.
I think the confusion comes because people don't take calorie density into account.
An acre of grapes produces 375 million calories and uses 2.5 Acreft of water
An acre of almonds produces 580 million calories and uses 3 acreft of water
Beef is much much worse.
As an aside, Husks take up negligible water in terms of the trees consumption and are not a good indicator. 99% of the water used by nut trees goes into evaporation.
Thanks for the information. Something I've wondered with these sorts of things is what's meant by "used" with water? I can understand measuring the input into the system, but there's a lot of outputs, & some of those outputs should flow back into the system sooner than others, causing variance of how much impact that input of water had on the surrounding areas' drought
Since you're saying 99% evaporation, I assume for most everything most water follows air flows which through the pareto principle collect to places which don't need water? (& may actively not want water in the case of flooding)
As you surmised, "used" water is the input to the system. For most systems, the waste water outputs ends up in places which are not useful.
The valuable output of the water (H20) is converted to other molecules (eg sugar, cellulose, ect). You could measure this by the change in plant mass from the start of the season to harvest time.
Some of the water will also seep into the ground deeper than the tree can reach, and some will be lost as evaporated vapor from the leaves and tissue.
This water would is generally gone from the system. This can and cause increased humidity and cloud formation and be blown to different locations. There is some literature on the subject.
They aren't saying people should go after wine makers for wasting water. They're saying going after almonds is scapegoating. Calorie density will tend to come up in that context because the premise is that vegans are increasing demand for almonds which is squandering water on poor nutrition. This plays on memes about vegan diets being insufficient nutritionally
As it turns out neither almonds nor wine are really to blame for California's droughts. So yes, ferment some alcohol & be merry
I think my point was that before we judge if almonds use too much water, we have to ask what we use almonds for and how they compare to similar products.
IF we use almonds for food, I think it is reasonable to compare almonds to other foods, and ask how much water they use. As such, I used numbers for edible table grapes.
IF the end goal is to to change state policy to make water use more efficient, I think we need to answer the question of why some foods are allowed to use more water than others.
They grow lots of almonds in California and export them all over the world.
I had Californian almonds in Europe and Asia. I don't get Califarnian beef there. (The beef on offer is usual from places with fewer water problems. There's no big need to conserve water where it ain't scarce.)
> You need so little water for drinking that it's essentially free or close to free.
Yeah, that's developed-world life talking.
Markets absolutely work at dissuading growing almonds in the desert. Until there's too much wealth disparity, and Peter is willing to pay more than Paul has in total for desert-grown almonds. Either Paul steals the water or he dies, and thieves aren't popular.
Of course there's another form of currency - votes. I can't really say they're universally distributed, because FPTP screws up the purchasing power of a vote. But I'd give good odds on a very strong correlation between a functioning democracy and cheap water.
Do you have an example of a place that has both a reasonably free trade in water and where poor people can't afford water to drink?
> Markets absolutely work at dissuading growing almonds in the desert. Until there's too much wealth disparity, and Peter is willing to pay more than Paul has in total for desert-grown almonds. Either Paul steals the water or he dies, and thieves aren't popular.
Eh, unlikely. Peter will just get his almonds from the cheapest supplier, who is unlikely to be growing in a desert.
There's nothing special about water in the scenario you are describing. Plenty of other commodities are traded on markets, and more developed markets have meant better and more secure supply for everyone, especially poor people.
> Of course there's another form of currency - votes. I can't really say they're universally distributed, because FPTP screws up the purchasing power of a vote. But I'd give good odds on a very strong correlation between a functioning democracy and cheap water.
Only some countries use FPTP. In any case, there's a strong correlation between any attributes generally seen as desirable. Figuring out causation is harder.
Btw, you know what poor people lack even more than money: influence and connections. I wouldn't look to politics to improving their lot.
I don't really care if you think it's unlikely. People dying of thirst where water-intensive, non-essential industries operate is empirically happening, now. It has happened in the past and will do so in future.
Btw, poor people lacking influence is not consistent with how quite a lot of European nobles died or the vast array of modern working practices that are suboptimal from a capitalist's point of view. I'll leave the debate there since I've no interest in arguing a fictional universe.
> Btw, poor people lacking influence is not consistent with how quite a lot of European nobles died
I believe people dying (noble or otherwise) is the recurring historical singularity we're trying to avoid; so we can both acknowledge that the poor can violently and quite temporarily gain political advantage while recognizing that during non-singular time periods (which is most of time) the converse is generally true.
While the war about details is fought in other comments, I just want to say thanks for your point, it really extended my point of view. I was aware that growing some things over others (be that cattle, almonds, rice or whatever) consumes a lot more water, but I did not have that in mind when thinking about pricing water.
I am still worried by the idea of water becoming a luxury good, but my view is less one-sided now. Thank you!
I've seen the numbers that say to grow 1 pound of almonds you need almost 16000 pounds of water.
But the actual almonds are only something like 6% water by weight, so when that pound of almonds leaves the farm for some far off destination it is only taking about an ounce of that 16000 pounds of water with it.
What happens to the other almost 16000 pounds that does not end up in the almonds?
Almost everything that one would need for daily subsistence is tied to benchmark future contracts: cattle, soy beans, rice, wheat, sugar, coffee are all traded as futures on exchanges. Most coffee in the world is traded against the Coffee C future benchmark for instance: https://www.theice.com/products/15/Coffee-C-Futures
Giving producers and consumers a way to get a standardized contract at a given point ahead in time usually makes the price of the underlying commodity much more stable.
It has been argued that the way our society operates is based on the concept of futures contracts. It all began with the Dutch tulip futures in the 17th century that stabilized flower prices and made them a viable business: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulip_mania
Don't miss the "Legal Changes" section of that article. The bubble and subsequent bust, it turns out, was caused by government meddling (at the behest of powerful economic interests, mind you).
Say I'm a farmer and I need X gallons of water next year. How much does that cost me? It costs YX where Y is the cost of water per gallon next year - which is unknown.
"Unknown" is something of a problem when preparing the budget for next year. I could buy X gallons now, but then I'd need a way to store it. Or, I could agree to pay a specific price now for water that would be delivered in the future.
Futures markets improve the affordability of the resource by its actual consumers by stabilizing its price. Unpredictable prices, even if they end up being low, hurt consumers by requiring consumers to keep cash in reserve just in case the (remember, unpredictable) price swings wildly. That cash in reserve is cash that cannot be spent elsewhere, be it necessities like food or luxuries produced elsewhere in the economy.
Has this been found empirically or is this just a theory, just like how the free market without government intervention always is supposed to give the most favorable outcome?
The effect is real, and more comparable to insurance than the free market thing you mention. If you are a water supplier and you sell your water through futures with e.g. a 6 month duration, then you know for certain that you will be able to sell your water for that price for the next six months, and if the price of water drops substantially, you have six months to figure out how to pay your employees, because it wont hit you until six months later.
Of course, if the price increases, then you don't get the profit that this would have otherwise produced. That's the price of the insurance against low prices.
Its the reason people created futures markets. Producers want price stability to hedge in the event of a crash so they can pay their workers in 6 months. Purchasers want price stability in the event of a shortage so they can still purchase inputs and keep their business running in 6 months. People who have information related to future price swings can make a profit by purchasing futures contracts. Producers and purchasers then learn about this when the price of the contract changes.
I think this highlights an oft-missed point. There is no such thing as a free market without government intervention. Left to their own devices, traders will always try to game the market to their own advantage.
First, if you look hard enough, you can see traces of the hand of government in almost anything on earth, including any market.
In practice, government meddling is a matter of degree and kind. The dose makes the poison. There are some markets that are free enough of interference that we can fruitfully analyze them as 'free' markets.
Second, what do you mean by 'try to game the market'? In general, markets are sustainable in the long run without government interference (and usually actually more stable this way).
Interactions in markets often behave like the famous Prisoner's Dilemma. So, yes, for a single interaction it's profitable to cheat the other guy, but repeated interactions tend very strongly towards cooperation.
Free markets only work when there are large numbers of sellers and buyers. One example (out of many) of a necessary government intervention is to prevent monopolies from forming (or at least regulate them). Whenever one party has an outsized influence, they will tilt the whole market in their favour. It doesn't even have to be a monopoly, if a single player makes up a substantial portion of the market, they can affect it in non-free ways.
Even Adam Smith recognised the need for government regulation to ensure that markets remain free.
Edit: I think you may have misread my comment; I wasn't claiming that there is no such thing as a market without government interference (though that is probably mostly true). I was claiming that a market cannot be free without government regulating it to keep it free.
I am challenging that assumption that markets are so easily monopolized.
Markets are more robust than you give them credit for.
One argument is that rather often governments themselves are trying to monopolize markets with all their regulatory might, but grey and black markets usually spring up rather quickly.
Trying to monopolize a market as a private participant (even a big one) without the government on your side is even harder.
I do agree that monopolies are an important consideration when designing regulation. But mostly in the sense that your regulation has to be careful to avoid supporting monopolies. Especially barriers to entry are often overlooked.
For example, regardless of content, complexity of regulation itself can be a barrier to entry. Compliance takes a lot of lawyers and accountants. (Eg most agricultural subsidies around the world go to really big farms. And financial regulation's complexity essentially forces banks to become big.)
If regulators were really interested in combatting monopolies, there are a few straightforward strategies to try first:
* Encourage foreign competitors to enter domestic markets
* Encourage companies from different industries to branch out (eg Walmart tried to offer banking services a while ago. Lobbying by banks kept that competition at bay.)
* Encourage start-ups. (This is much harder for governments than the first two points. One way to encourage start-ups is via simplifying regulations. But there are lots of other popular ways that don't work well.
See eg all the government funding available for tech startups in Europe that sadly doesn't seem to produce much by and large; but it feels good to hand out money.)
> First, if you look hard enough, you can see traces of the hand of government in almost anything on earth, including any market....
> In general, markets are sustainable in the long run without government interference (and usually actually more stable this way).
With the market, you don't even have to look very hard. Many people like to believe that the market is self-regulating and "natural," but that's not the case. It was created via government policy (hundreds of years ago), and depends on government in such fundamental ways that it's inseparable from it.
The market would destroy itself (and much else) without government interference, and to claim otherwise is akin to denying the mountain because you're standing on top of it.
1) The "market" (for what, you don't say) was created by government policy hundreds of years ago (but not thousands of yeas ago?)
2) The market needs constant interference in order to not destroy itself (and again you seem to be referring to a great range of economic activity, perhaps all of it, but not all of it because you're also saying it would destroy "much else")
Do you have evidence to support either of these claims, other than begging the question? Would you like to modify them so that they are more specific?
> 1) The "market" (for what, you don't say) was created by government policy hundreds of years ago (but not thousands of yeas ago?)
By market, I'm referring to what we refer to as the market today, which is a relatively modern invention. Sure, for thousands of years there have been things called "markets," but they were far more limited in scope and their role in society was not nearly the same.
> 2) The market needs constant interference in order to not destroy itself (and again you seem to be referring to a great range of economic activity, perhaps all of it, but not all of it because you're also saying it would destroy "much else")
I mean, isn't this obvious? The market itself is not going to enforce contracts, it's not going prevent a wealthy person from paying for a private army and making his own rules, it's not going to do anything about monopolies and cartels (at least not on a reasonable timescale), it's not going to manage negative externalities, it's not going to address or mitigate socially destabilizing economic forces, etc.
The market is like a car: it some ways it may be a modern marvel, effortlessly regulating the timing of its complicated internal workings in a way no person could, but without a driver it will run out of gas and as happily drive into a wall than not.
If you cheat good enough you can amass power which will make your cheating more effective.
Not sure why say that repeated interactions lead towards cooperation.
It can lead towards submission as easily as cooperation.
> There is no such thing as a free market without government intervention.
Maybe this is true with respect to global financial markets, etc. But it can't possibly be true in general. People have stably traded physical goods in literal markets (i.e. stalls where you buy spices and tomatoes and such) for thousands of years with no government intervention.
Small amounts of people do not need a government because they can just represent themselves. Any city needs a government, tasting at any sensible scale needs a the government. 3000BC Egyptians had taxes, laws and a government.
Can you provide some historical example of thousands of citizens trading without a government? That would be an incredible experiment on anarchism.
Indeed the first securities were sold via auction under a buttonwood tree, and I don't think any government agents were on hand to facilitate it, but I could be wrong.
Everybody who has an explicit "rainy-day" fund set aside is somebody who is paying a price to try and prepare for instability / insecurity. The collective sum of all those funds in the US is probably in the billions, if not more. Futures contracts provide a more explicit way, with a stronger guarantee, of paying the price for security for specific assets / resources rather than hand-wavy guesses of how much money should be put aside for the Black Swan case.
Sure, there are plenty of poor people who are so poor that they don't have any savings at all. But surely you don't think that rainy-day funds are just a theory?
A lot of markets break the perfect market assumption. For example, monopolies shouldn't exist in theory but they do in reality. In theory a competitor can always jump in and destroy the monopoly.
Commodity markets are much closer to perfect markets than anything else.
> especially if we ever get to a point where some people can 'afford' water while others can't.
If we do get to a point where this is true, it will primarily be because of decreasing amounts of water sources, increasing population, etc. Banning water futures won't magically solve these problems.
Contrariwise, it will likely increase access to water by allowing futures contract prices to signal future scarcity and motivate capital investment in production.
This is one area where I’ll take government investment over capital investment every time. I can’t imagine how bad it would be having water production controlled by a bunch of capitalists. What happens when private equity buys out the tech and rights so they can put it into value extraction mode?
The cost of the futures contracts would go up in anticipation and other capitalists would invest in order to make some of that sweet profit and then there would be more people competing to produce water. Basically the opposite of the government, who would tell you "you use too much water", raise taxes and institute rationing.
When a private company owns one of the most basic resources for survival, then they have the ultimate leverage over you.
Privately owned water is being extracted from a region and then sold. They have no incentive to sell water to those who need it to survive, except if they also accidentally make the owners more money.
One basic consequence is incredible human suffering and an extreme amount of power imbalance. Then, it is a matter of time and critical mass until things get ugly and violent.
It sounds like you have a problem against privately owned water rights (the exclusive right to extract water from some region and then sell it), not against water futures per se?
FWIW I'm sympathetic to that position (in some form), it would just be better to be more precise... people are acting like "water is a basic human right" is a principle that can straightforwardly be used to derive the rest of our water policy.
Good point. The issue I have with water futures in particular is two fold:
It solidifies the notion of privately owned water sources in a general sense: That's too much "free market" for my taste and goes against my ethical disposition.
Secondly it doesn't solve any problems and challenges. The incentive here is to profit from making market predictions. No more, no less.
There are more balanced approaches to handle water distribution. Via public commissions and regulated use for example.
> Secondly it doesn't solve any problems and challenges. The incentive here is to profit from making market predictions. No more, no less.
For many people, it allows them to get price stability. It means that, for the length of a growing season, they can have water at a known price and not be vulnerable to price swings.
IMO, that does address a real challenge or problem faced by real people. Especially in agricultural places where water markets already exist, like California.
I think you're right, though. There must be a better way to handle this. I'd love to hear about realistic ways to reform California's water rights system!
Sure, but privately owned water and all the problems you describe existed long before these contracts came on the market and I don't see how futures contracts make them any worse.
In fact futures contracts could in theory even take away a little of the power they have since, in effect, they won't be able to raise water prices on you over night, but you can have a 3-6 month warning that a price rise is coming and can plan accordingly.
What's the problem? These are futures, not options, so the dynamic is different and you MUST take delivery at the price you bid for. If anything this is a fantastic step in the right direction of starting to acknowledge that the cost of consumption should be borne by the consumers (and not by the politically less privileged).
Water's cheap and storage isn't. I would expect resale to only significantly affect the price of extreme bulk use. Residential use isn't that big and I expect the vast majority of the price to stay in distribution and filtering.
> Water should be free upto basic living necessities.
If you mean to an end user, that's your opinion. I think we should aspire to that, but water is most definitely not "free" in general, and treating it as such is very dangerous. Even if government is responsible for providing water to the people, there is a cost (to the government for obtaining that water), and that cost needs to be accounted for somewhere.
Perhaps you can provide a better price discovery mechanism that efficiently matches the price to its cost, that is robust to environmental swings and minimizes waste. Please let us know.
> Umm what's the incentive or motivation behind making this trade able?
Water is a scarce commodity used in industry. Since there is more demand than supply, supply has to be allocated in some way. Markets are the ordinary way of doing that.
What do you propose as an alternative? Here are some examples.
The first option is to give everyone the same amount of water, and prohibit anyone with more than they need from selling it, since that would be back to markets again. That obviously doesn't work, because some, like farms and power plants, need more than the typical household, and they would have no way to get it.
Another option would be to make water free to everyone. Use as much as you want. But it's scarce, so some would water their lawn in the middle of a drought and people would die.
Another option would be central planning. The politburo would decide how much water everyone gets. This requires your politicians to be smart enough to make better allocations than markets would and then actually apply that intelligence to the problem even when there is no personal benefit in doing that and a large personal benefit from corrupt allocations. Historically the results of doing things this way have ranged from mediocre to presiding over the deaths of millions of people.
Markets work better than all of those things, so what do you propose that works better than markets?
Note that there is a version of the first option that works great in combination with markets -- everyone gets a minimum amount of water required to live and then all the rest of the water is sold in the market. But then you still have markets for water.
And this is HN already. The attitude of the general population is often worse.
I do remember early HN and even early reddit being much more pro-market. I wonder, assuming my perception mirrors a real change, whether that's down to changes in individuals' attitudes or to different people making up the bulk of the communities? Are we just going mainstream?
> do remember early HN and even early reddit being much more pro-market
It shows you have registered in 2007. Quite a lot of history has happened since then which may have altered people's opinion of the pro-market narrative.
> Are we just going mainstream?
Mainstream opinion is very pro-market. Calling for abolition of either markets or value itself is a highly niche position--you will typically only see people calling, to varying degrees, of smoothing rough edges.
Interesting, from what I can tell the mainstream seems crazy far left and in favour of all kinds of interventions to 'smooth rough edges' and worse. Rhetoric against rich people is rather popular.
But yes, from an even further left point of view, full on abolishing of markets ain't that popular. (A few countries tried going in that direction throughout history, it never ended well.)
In the US the Republicans are against free trade, and the Democrats have their usually anti market stance.
About stuff since 2007: the economic difficulties in the years after mostly showed that when central banks refuse to print enough money, nominal spending drops, and the economy tanks. (The Israeli and Australian central banks kept their countries' nominal GDP stable, and mostly avoided recession.) But you are right that the perception in the mainstream does not agree with that perspective (as I mentioned, the mainstream is by-and-large anti-market.)
> Interesting, from what I can tell the mainstream seems crazy far left and in favour of all kinds of interventions to 'smooth rough edges' and worse.
I'd like to see some examples.
> In the US the Republicans are against free trade
This isn't anti pro-market. This is anti market-as-totalizing-factor-in-life. These things aren't contradictory.
> and the Democrats have their usually anti market stance.
They gave us NAFTA. They passed a--i shit you not--market-mediated healthcare bill. As you speak, there is literally a power struggle happening wherein lobbyists are being stacked in Biden's future cabinet to ensure favorable market positions for their represented patrons.
I think there's a lot of confusion on your part. I think you're mis-using "market," to refer to some "free-market," that could never exist. I might be wrong, but there's no other way that I could understand how you can refer to Democrats, as a whole, as "anti-market." Sure, AOC gets a lot of press, but you're missing the forest for the trees when this forms your world-view of what that party is and does.
You are right that we are probably using different terminology.
What I would have in mind is policy more guided by econ 101, or alternatively, whatever Estonian, Singapore and Hong Kong are doing.
The latter only by-and-large and with big exceptions obviously, since they are complicated real world places.
So called 'free trade agreements' are an interesting example: econ 101 tells us that free trade agreements are pretty silly. Adam Smith and Ricardo already showed that you should abolish your own trade barriers unilaterally regardless of what the other guy is doing, no need for any agreements.
(But that's a digression. I agree that free trade agreements are largely seen as pro-market by the general public.)
In any case, NAFTA stems from the bygone era of the Washington Consensus. It mostly predates the time I am talking about.
Yes, there's a tiny bit of market in the American healthcare system. But it's a very small sliver.
> What I would have in mind is policy more guided by econ 101
I have a degree in Economics. The first they thing teach you in Econ 201 is to ignore everything that happened in Econ 101: it's useful to learn to read graphs, but everything is largely useless otherwise.
Also, why are you prescribing that we ought to follow Econ 101 then 2 sentences later telling us to instead ignore Econ 101 in favor of this other thing. This is contradictory advice.
> A perfect free market might never have existed, but good enough approximations do
Good enough is arbitrary. Go check out Anarcho-Capitalists, they want a very different good-enough. Furthermore, we're finding another contradiction: your pursuit of a free-market, yet you're offering up countries with varying levels of market and capital control. Estonia, for example, has highly market-distorting healthcare/insurance industries through a monopsony. This is, again, contradictory, as a monopsony is a market-distorting force--especially when constructed through government mandate. Or is this where that ideology safety-valve kicks in:
> The latter only by-and-large and with big exceptions obviously, since they are complicated real world places.
It's full of contradiction and arbitrary distinctions.
I think it's incredibly interesting because it helps people actually experience economic theory first hand by letting everyone run their own virtual business. It's obviously highly simplified but if you have spent your entire life on the consumer/worker side then you will never get to experience even a tiny bit of the complexity of running a real business and how economic theory works out in practice. When you aren't actually running your own business you often get hung up on high profile edge cases like monopolies where it's in your face that the economy is not in your favor but you never ever stop and think for a second about the parts of the economy that do actually work out just fine. Things like water futures are a net positive compared to the previous situation. Instead everyone in this comment section assumes the worst and thinks about how this system is going to get broken and abused because that is what they experience all the time in far more complicated situations like health care.
Free markets aren't ideal in every situation. That's true but there are also situations in which they are excellent. The closer you get to a prefect market the more effective the free market. Health care is the ultimate counter example to a perfect market and managing it as a free market will not yield efficient results.
>What I would have in mind is policy more guided by econ 101
I think we're in the mess we're in BECAUSE too many politicians act like all there is to know about economics is covered in econ 101.
I suggest this book - "What Every Economics Student Needs to Know and Doesn't Get in the Usual Principles Text" (https://www.amazon.com/Every-Economics-Student-Doesnt-Princi...) for some insight into what happens when perfect, academic, theoretical models collide with the real world.
>So called 'free trade agreements' are an interesting example: econ 101 tells us that free trade agreements are pretty silly. Adam Smith and Ricardo already showed that you should abolish your own trade barriers unilaterally regardless of what the other guy is doing, no need for any agreements.
That's obviously stupid because it would undermine all regulation because you can always ship products to an unregulated market and then ship them back. Free trade agreements exist because the countries involved want to keep some degree of regulation and they want to have a choice which regulation they get to keep.
>It's sad how people just don't believe that markets are good at all.
The problem is that the definition of "free markets" has been badly muddied. What we have in most of the real world are not free markets. It skews everyone's opinion.
Free markets would be so much worse than what we have right now. Without government intervention to guarantee worker protections and curtail corporate power, capital would concentrate in the hands of a few and the rest of us would be serfs in the neo-feudalist hellhole that arises. Enjoy your company scrip.
What makes you think so? Do you have any countries in mind that have less government intervention and look more neo-feudalist?
As a counter example, many places in Asia have gone more pro-market in the last decades and have benefitted enormously from it.
It's all a matter of degree, of course. Eg South Korea isn't made up of only free markets. But it has noticeably freer markets than North Korea. Or China pre- and post Deng Xiaoping.
Singapore is perhaps the closest to a free market place on earth, and is also one of the richest and safest.
Student loans, house loans, car loans, payday loans. Food deserts, prison standard of living. Social mobility in general. "Right to work", worker protection. At-will firing. Non-existing safety nets. Days of vacation and parental leave. Average savings per capita.
Most of the above are absolutely more feudalist (not sure about the neo prefix). Some of these are literally unimaginable at the other side of the pond.
>> Most of the above are absolutely more feudalist
I'm not seeing it, either that most of the above are feudalist, or that the US is more feudalist than Europe.
Food deserts? Feudalism was an agricultural society. Peasants worked on farms. "There's no grocery store poor people can get to easily without a car" wasn't really a thing back then.
At-will firing? That's capitalism, not feudalism. In feudalism peasants were attached the land. "Go peasant for a competing lord" wasn't a thing either. More like at least the US idea of Europe being someplace where it is impossible to fire an employee once they get hired. That sounds like feudalism.
Days of vacation? "While we may be accustomed to images of medieval peasants toiling away from dawn until dusk and be convinced from this that we have it better than they ever did — a 13th-century laborer could have up to 25 weeks off per year". Working all the time is capitalism, not feudalism. Europe is way more feudalist on this measure too.
Payday loans are feudalist? You think serfs got payday loans? Or car loans? Someone told a peasant back then, "Oh sure, here's a house, it's yours, pay me back over the next 30 years"?
Right to work? What does that have to do with feudalism? If you were attached the the land, you had to work it for the benefit of the lord, it wasn't whether you paid dues to the Peasants Local 1347 or not.
Criticize capitalism all you want, but it is not feudalism.
Student loans and house loans and payday loans are very regulated and have heavy government involvement. As far as I can tell, most house loans in the US are guaranteed by the government, something that's literally unimaginable at the other side of the pond.
Germany has Aldi and Lidl to help against food deserts.
Not sure what you mean by prison standards of living?
About social mobility: have a look at 'The Son Also Rises' for an interesting approach to historic and cross country comparison.
I am still quite confused about why you link all these things with feudalism? Feudalims was really heavy on intervention and paternalism. Just the opposite of what a market based order would be.
The loan situation can be attributed to Nixon closing the gold window and the US having the world's reserve currency anyway. Money is cheap these days. It will not be forever.
Well I wouldn't call this a failure of the free market because this is actually the exact opposite situation. Americans have decided to solve funding for education through private funding, which is fine in principle but then they ruined the free market component through extreme government intervention that sets up perverse incentives. It's a text book example of government intervention gone wrong. The way it should have worked is that degrees with good job prospects are cheaper to finance than those where people end up unemployed. If people pick the wrong degree that's fine because they can discharge the debt which causes interest to go up and make the uneconomical degree more expensive. It also means that colleges don't get a free money siphon and waste all the money on things that don't improve the job prospects of their students.
The free market utopia would be that average people go to college and money printing "corporate drones" leave college. People can then use their wealth to pursue their true interests in their spare time, or you know at least feed their kids. Instead what we have right now is basically 18 year olds chasing their dreams and everyone around them (advisers, bankers, government, college) tells them to go ahead while those young people are about to blow their foot of with the debt and no job prospects.
>house loans
Not sure what's wrong with those to be fair. The free market works here because money is just another type of commodity. It's fungible, it doesn't matter what bank you go to. The central bank printing press is causing some asset inflation but it's not fundamentally broken, just tilted.
>car loans
I have heard that it is difficult to get financing for small cars in the USA because Americans don't buy small cars anymore. I personally can't comprehend this but why not just get a used car instead? What else is wrong car loans?
>payday loans
Yeah this is definitively a complete failure for the free market. There are some people that are doing so badly that lending them money for a profit will just make their situation worse. This is something that can only be solved through charity or welfare with no strings attached and no expectation to get the aid back. If someone is lacking $500 then charging them $600 isn't going to solve their problems. Giving loans to people who can't pay them back is always a bad idea. However, there is also a group of people who is merely late on their payments but can eventually get back on their feet. 30% annualized interest for small loans can be a perfectly acceptable solution for people who are a high default risk. Payday loans are often something insane like 500% annualized interest and they also offer extremely poor repayment conditions. They just shouldn't exist.
>Food deserts
This is caused by differences in access to transportation. If all the "not poor" people use their car to drive to a Walmart that is 15 miles away then poor people won't get access to a decent store within 15 miles.
>prison standard of living
Yes, another failure of the free market but also a case of the people involved being morally corrupt through and through. It's basically legalized slavery and the prison wards can always ask for more "slaves".
>Social mobility in general.
Well, this is primarily caused by labor abroad increasing supply for everything and pushing down prices to a level where richer nations can't compete. The "corporate drone" I mentioned above does very well in such a situation because his skills are still in high demand. The problem we have is that there are not enough "corporate drones" who get a profitable degree. Upskilling is extremely important because low skilled workers basically compete with dirt cheap labor abroad nowadays.
>"Right to work", worker protection
The free market can work in favor of workers if businesses are competing for workers. As I said, there is a lack of workers that companies want. If you have to compete with your neighbors it's a race to the bottom. I can't say the free market failed here. It's inherently a difference in culture.
> Non-existing safety nets.
Yeah this is one of the weirdest things about the USA. It's easy to get fired, but it's also even easier to lose everything once you lose that job.
>days of vacation and parental leave.
One of the greatest failings of the free market is that it can't ensure reproduction of our species. Going by what the bean counters say we would never have kids.
>Average savings per capita.
This is probably influenced by culture. Owning housing often causes savings to go up. In renter societies you often see people own less capital than in home ownership focused societies.
Overall the USA somehow managed to have both the worst parts of the free market and the worst parts of government intervention in one ugly package. It's very surprising to me. I'm pretty sure that if they could have avoided the worst parts of government intervention that they would put my own country to shame. Instead there are some rich dudes in a gated community and lots of poor people around the gated communities. Yeah sure the rich dudes brag about how rich they are rich but that's not the only important thing for me. It's also not guaranteed that I will be one of them if I go there. I never want to live there. If I was on exile I'd rather go to countries that are not as wealthy as Germany than to the USA.
Well thanks for the interesting background info on some of these points, but what is your conclusion here?
I readily admit that I just brainstormed to support my initial association, so not all points are going to hold their water. But you seem to agree to a direct relationship of free market and feudalistic traits, so do you actually agree, but wanted to introduce nuance?
I agree with a lot of the points so I will just comment on the one I disagree with strongly. Social mobility in higher in Europe than it is in the United States, but they face the same pressures in terms of cheap labor from other countries.
The parent argued that low social mobility in the US was because of foreign labor. I pointed out that Europe has higher social mobility but also competes with foreign labor.
Never said cheap labor was evil or that foreigners aren't people. I never made a judgement good, neutral, bad. Not sure why you read it that way?
> As a counter example, many places in Asia have gone more pro-market in the last decades and have benefitted enormously from it.
I don't think this is necessarily a counter example. Certainly some individuals in these countries are much better off than they were before. The economies of these countries may be doing better, but this growth has increasingly come at the expense of a vast number of individuals lower down the pole. The youth of China moved to the city from farming towns and villages, and now work to enrich the CEOs and executives of Foxconn. Children in Bangladesh and India are spending twelve hours a day making shoes for Nike. The well off in these countries are much more well-off than they were before, but the poor are potentially in a worse/more inescapable position than they started.
> Singapore is perhaps the closest to a free market place on earth, and is also one of the richest and safest.
Singapore is a heavily authoritarian country in which the state directly controls large sectors of the market[1] and daily life.
Some quotes from the source that illustrate the extent to which the Singaporean government is directly involved in shaping and controlling the country's markets:
> State monopolies provide all utilities, telephone and postal services, port and airport services, industrial estates, and radio and television. Government ministries provide a large part of medical and health services, all sanitation services, and all education for the population from primary to tertiary level. The state Housing and Development Board houses nearly three-quarters of the population in public housing estates.
In the non-social sector they own and operate:
> Singapore Airlines, ...A state trading company, a state shipping company, two state join-venture shipyards, ...The Development Bank of Singapore
The government also owns "about 75% of all land in the country".
The rest of the paper goes into detail explaining how the government routinely intervenes with subsidies and tax policy in order to force the market into whatever shape it deems fit. So I think the fact that people view Singapore at anything close to a free market is more a testament to just how effective the propaganda that has been pushing free market economic thought has been.
> The well off in these countries are much more well-off than they were before, but the poor are potentially in a worse/more inescapable position than they started.
Would you count this statement as falsified, if eg the median income in Bangladesh went up? (Or any other percentile.) If not, what would falsify that statement?
Singapore is an interesting case. You are right about ownership. I am basing my estimate more on eg the low rate of government spending compared to total GDP, general ease of doing business, light touch regulation.
Close to my heart (coming from Germany) is the absence of pervasive occupational licensing in Singapore. Similarly the absence of minimum wage laws.
> The rest of the paper goes into detail explaining how the government routinely intervenes with subsidies and tax policy in order to force the market into whatever shape it deems fit. So I think the fact that people view Singapore at anything close to a free market is more a testament to just how effective the propaganda that has been pushing free market economic thought has been.
I am currently living in Singapore, and so far the 'propaganda' has been so effective that even living here I still see that it's fairly pro-market.
And that includes talking to 'normal' locals, and also to people running businesses here.
Malaysia is useful for contrast. The government is a much bigger drag on the economy there.
The paper you quote is fairly old, and also doesn't seem to reflect the consensus of economists. (It's nonetheless interesting though.)
> Would you count this statement as falsified, if eg the median income in Bangladesh went up? (Or any other percentile.) If not, what would falsify that statement?
I don't honestly know. Quality of life is in my mind the most important factor and is hard to measure, I don't think there's any one statistic or small group of statistics that can capture it.
What worries me at the moment is the trend of 40-50 years of productivity increases leaving wages far behind. The elimination of secure, well paying jobs for the lower working classes that have been replaced with gig/service work where you hope you'll be given enough hours to make end meet that week. Sectors of local economies destroyed or made dependent on global capital firms with huge losses. I want to know where it will end, because all I can see in the future is rising inequality and stratification.
> Close to my heart (coming from Germany) is the absence of pervasive occupational licensing in Singapore. Similarly the absence of minimum wage laws.
I'm not familiar with occupational licensing in Germany. But I don't have a problem with it if it's done to ensure safety/quality and there are minimal barriers to entry, employers seem all too happy to introduce inexperienced workers to situations which may not be obviously dangerous to the worker without proper training.
Minimum wage is a fairly contentious issue, what is it you dislike about it in particular? Interestingly it looks like some sectors have enforced a minimum wage:
I'd be interested in knowing why cleaning and security were singled out specifically rather than a more general rule.
>I am currently living in Singapore, and so far the 'propaganda' has been so effective that even living here I still see that it's fairly pro-market.
>And that includes talking to 'normal' locals, and also to people running businesses here.
>Malaysia is useful for contrast. The government is a much bigger drag on the economy there.
>The paper you quote is fairly old, and also doesn't seem to reflect the consensus of economists. (It's nonetheless interesting though.)
It was interesting to see how far back the disagreement on Singapore's economy goes.
> What worries me at the moment is the trend of 40-50 years of productivity increases leaving wages far behind.
First, people usually make that claim for the US. Living standards in the developed world have improved too visibly. So let's concentrate on the US.
Second, that claim usually comes about by people comparing productivity statistics to wage statistics. Usually, both of those data sets are inflation adjusted, but via different measures of inflation.
To avoid that complication, we can just look at the ratio of nominal wages to nominal GDP over time.
That's a fall to be sure, but calling the change something like 'leaving wages far behind' seems a bit dramatic.
If I remember right, most of that lost 8% went to higher land rents. The share of capital is generally stable.
I find land rents as problematic as the next Georgist.
> I want to know where it will end, because all I can see in the future is rising inequality and stratification.
Globally, inequality has gone down massively over the last few decades. Billions of people used to starve. Now people in China and (many in) India obsess over which smart phone to buy.
> I'm not familiar with occupational licensing in Germany. But I don't have a problem with it if it's done to ensure safety/quality and there are minimal barriers to entry, employers seem all too happy to introduce inexperienced workers to situations which may not be obviously dangerous to the worker without proper training.
In Germany, the government requires a two to three year apprenticeship for you to be allowed to eg cut hair or fix a computer or lay bricks or cook etc.
In Singapore, you mostly just have to do a short health and safety training, and then it's up to the customers to reject your bad haircuts.
> Minimum wage is a fairly contentious issue, what is it you dislike about it in particular?
If we want poor people to have more money, we should levy a general tax of some kind, and then use the proceeds to give them more money.
Minimum wages put a burden on people who interact with poor people instead. So they encourage you to find ways around having to interact with poor people. Eg you can avoid the burden by eg replacing workers with robots, or by shopping at a more upmarket place than Walmart. Or eating at fancy restaurants instead of Burger King.
(You might notice that the people shopping at places that hire a lot of minimum waged workers tend to be also on the poorer side.
And I don't think business owners are absorbing the costs of minimum wages, because capital is internationally mobile.)
> It was interesting to see how far back the disagreement on Singapore's economy goes.
I asked Google Scholar to tell me who cited the paper you quoted to get some further context. The paper and author seem to be embedded in some particular corner of economics.
Wikipedia and most of the rest of the world describe Singapore as free market. (Including also the economists blogging at econlog.)
> I'd be interested in knowing why cleaning and security were singled out specifically rather than a more general rule.
I might look up the history behind that. In general, I assume it was some pragmatic bending to political pressure. In some instances the population is not quite as free market as the government here.
I really like the system Singapore has for cars. Basically, the government sets an overall limit for the number of cars on the island. It's about a million at the moment. Those one million permits are auctioned off to the highest bidders for ten years at a time. Each month, roughly 1% of permits expire and are auctioned off again.
The auction is a simple affair:
The government takes all the bids from the current month, and determines the lowest price that clears the market. Ie every one who bid more than the clearing price gets a permit at the clearing price. Everyone who doesn't get a permit bid less than the clearing price.
To come to the point: often people suggest that instead of every winner paying the same price, winners should be made to pay what they bid.
For some reason, that's supposed to make big companies pay more in the end, and individuals pay less.
Of course, big companies are exactly the kind of institutions who can afford the modelling and research to forecast the clearing price, and they can also afford to miss out or get a few extra cars in their fleet.
(Thus the government understands economics a bit better than much of the population.)
It's also a good illustration of how the government intervenes here, instead of letting everyone drive a car, but does so in a way that econ 101 would approve of.
Free market and government intervention are just tools to achieve a desired outcome. You can have too much market freedom and too much government intervention. Moderation is key. It's also important to regulate the right things. A lot of economies are failing to grow because of government oppression or corruption. A lot of economies get into undesirable situations because they are too liberalized.
The balance is usually tilted slightly towards free markets because many governments are often incompetent but the free market doesn't tolerate incompetence or inefficiencies. In many cases it is so hyper efficient that smaller players have such a hard time that monopolies form and globalization brought this to a new height where we have entire countries like China specialize in manufacturing to the point where USA/Europe can't compete and seek out other opportunities.
We are being told that markets solve everything and yet the US have the most expensive healthcare in the West and the lousiest internet. The belief is empirically supported.
The empirical evidence is that internet is cheaper in countries with local-loop unbundling, and that countries that have price controls for medical care have cheaper healthcare. You can't argue with observable facts.
I'll happy accept that at face value (even if I think the truth of the first statement is slightly more complex that you make it out to be). Just not sure that leads to the conclusions you seem to be drawing from those facts.
It happens with everything: markets, politicians, unions, revolutions... It's easy to find bad (really bad!) precedents which affect lots of people and this creates very strong opinions. Although I agree it is sad, it's also very understandable.
Water futures are just a promise to deliver water at a certain price. You can sell the promise for money even if you don't have the water today but you know you will have the water tomorrow. If you sell your water on the day it is extracted then you are vulnerable to daily market swings. Sometimes there will be gluts, sometimes droughts.
> Umm what's the incentive or motivation behind making this trade able?
Because it’s pretty fucking important and the best way to make sure it’s not wasted is to get it as freely traded as possible. Rations are terrible and we need pricing to make sure we aren’t doing something dumb like growing almonds in a desert with water that needs to be used for drinking water or even just another crop that isn’t so inefficient.
As it stands, the super old water rights around the US of farmers are fucking the rest of society because they don’t pay for it on an open market.
> As it stands, the super old water rights around the US of farmers are fucking the rest of society because they don’t pay for it on an open market.
This is just an extension of land. Certain people are granted a monopoly on a resource because their ancestors knew the right people, or were simply lucky.
The title is provocative as people's minds immediately go to some sort of dystopia where nobody can afford a water bottle because of megacorp capitalism or something.
But it's sobering to realize how much water agriculture can waste today.
My cousin inherited some sort of farm license when they bought their property in the countryside. It has a well down into the water table and river access. He was saying how he could freely pump 100,000L/day if they wanted to, mainly going on about how weird it was to see how few stipulations there were in said license.
The incentive is to start pricing water appropriately. When water is priced appropriately it will be valued. When it is not priced appropriately, it is wasted and misused.
By mispricing the resource, we've gotten to where we are:
1) Massive inequality
2) Bottled water has become the default backup system to investing in rebuilding the tap water system
3) There is not enough investment to rebuild the tap water system. The paradox is best seen at an airport where a bottle of water is $5 in a single use plastic bottle (that lasts for 450 years) and the water fountain which is "free."
> Umm what's the incentive or motivation behind making this trade able?
Why shouldn't it be? I buy water every day.
> At first glance this seems incredibly concerning
Why?
> While we don't need oil or gold for our immediate survival, they do play key roles into how our society operates. I'm hoping to understand more on why we should treat water in the same way.
Capitalism's ability to make things into commodities is a way of making more of things. The timeliness is that water is getting scarce enough that soon people may not be able to afford water. This is a way to make it so that water stays affordable by incorporating it into a system where there is a profit incentive for producing more of it.
The idea that fresh, drinkable water exists "in plenty" is extremely off base. Humans need vast quantities of fresh water to allow modern-day life. Furthermore it is incredibly expensive to provide fresh water at any meaningful scale when it is not available naturally.
Yes and no. There are huge amounts of fresh drinkable water. It is just that it is in Canada and Russia and not where we have our agriculture. Here in Stockholm we have much more clean water than we ever could use, just like Russia and Canada.
Water shortages are local problems. The issue is just that a lot of the world's agriculture are on places with little water.
>There is "plenty" of water for an individual in nature.
What do you mean by "nature"? Do you own the land where the water is, or do you simply plan on collecting rainwater? Otherwise, you don't own the water. This is a real-life problem that countries and communities the world over are dealing with.
> Water rights exist, and who gets to exercise them in times of shortage can be very contentious, and even a cause for war.
Which is precisely why trading water futures is an immoral idea and can't be compared to trading any other commodity. There exist alternatives for every commodity on the planet (don't have oil? Use coal. No coal? Use wood, etc.), but there are none for water.
This is philosophically giberish. The world is not delivering water to your exact location at all times on demand. Logistics, infrastructure and regulations are.
You probably think that trading organs is immoral as well?
There's plenty of alternatives to any specific water, just use some other water. (And if you really want to, you can make water from oxygen and hydrocarbons.)
Not really no. It requires huge amounts of infrastructure, logistics, regulation to get it to people. Industrial activity, farming use water to make the food you eat
On the other hand, moving water is certainly the product of human activity, such as California Aqueduct moving water from Northern California to Southern California.
Current price is just under $500 for an acre-foot of water, and you have to buy in increments of 10 acre-feet. If you are unfamiliar with that unit of measurement, it’s pretty much what it sounds like. It’s the amount of water needed to cover one acre of land in one foot of water and is equal to 325,850 gallons. It is standard in agriculture to measure water output to crops in inches and feet because this makes the calculations for water usage much easier. For additional context, almonds use about 4 acre-feet of water per year and over the last ten years have generally been able to gross from a low end of $5000 an acre to upwards of $15000 depending on yield and price. Considering costs remain essentially fixed regardless of gross in almonds, this water price would therefore range from ruinous to fairly inconsequential.
The troubled and now almost defunct Hyflux has contracts in Singapore (on a multi-year committed contract at volume) back in 2011 for desalinated water at $0.45/m^3 or $554/acre foot.
1 acre foot = 1233 m^3.
very close to where the spot market right now is for water. water futures are trading at almost the same price as is the cost of desalination. make of it what you may..
1.Almonds were California's third most valuable agricultural product in 2016, accounting for $5.2 billion (about 11%) of agricultural output. The state produces 80% of the world's almonds and 100% of the United States’ commercial supply.
2. Almonds are California's most valuable export crop. Farmers exported $4.5 billion worth to foreign countries in 2016, about 22% of the state's total agricultural exports. The majority of these exports went to the European Union, China and India. While the EU is the largest consumer, the latter two countries are expanding markets where the state's Almond Board has actively marketed the nuts as a healthy snack.
As part of the 2018 China–United States trade war, China has imposed a 50% tariff on almonds. As a result, some Chinese businesses have resorted to importing almonds from other producers in Africa and Australia.
3. California suffered a severe drought from 2011 to 2017. In addition to economic consequences for the state's almond growers, the industry came under criticism for its water use. As of 2015, almond cultivation consumed about 10% of the state's water. Furthermore, almond acreage increased by 14% from 2007 to 2014, while almond irrigation increased by 27%. Critics have pointed out that the state's 6,000 almond farmers use roughly 35 times the amount of water as the 466,000 residents of Sacramento.
To supplement reduced deliveries from the state's water system, many almond farmers increased groundwater pumping, which can unsustainably deplete aquifers and cause land subsidence.
$5,000 is the average gross for almonds in california[1] and $15,000 is a red herring. Average costs are ~$4,500/acre[2]. Water is the second largest costs of production following land[3], so I would argue that there is no inconsequential increase in water price.
Also, Water/acre is meaningless without considering yield/acre or calories/acre. The caloric output/unit water for almonds is on par per calorie with many fruits, and much lower than many meats.[4]
Almond prices pushed $4 a pound just a couple years ago, and yields can easily exceed 4,000 an acre (I just got 4,100 on a fifth leaf orchard not even in full production). 15,000 is not the norm, but plenty of farmers have gotten that yield at least once over the last five years.
I don't know what to tell you. I am just going by the average production and price for california bearing acreage in California from the USDA and CA department of food and agriculture link I posted. This is an average, so it makes sense that there would be a spread.
Regarding the price, the ~$2.5 seems to match other sources I found [1]. That said, I understand any processor bonus's aren't included in this, so YMMV.
I have experience with other nuts, but not almonds, so I will have to take your word for it regarding the high end yields. That said, when talking about water policy and the impact on farmers, I think the mean is the most important number.
These water futures are in California, and would predominately be used by farmers. The units fit the use. Water futures in another part of the world would use units that fit their use.
> Burry has focused much of his attention on investing in water, gold, and farm land. Burry has been quoted saying "Fresh, clean water cannot be taken for granted. And it is not—water is political, and litigious."[20] At the end of the 2015 biographical dramedy film The Big Short, a statement regarding Burry's current interest reads, "The small investing he still does is all focused on one commodity: water."[20]
Reminds me of a famous video[0] of the CEO of Nestle explaining that there exists an "extreme position" that water is human right that everyone should have access to.
That sounds outrageous at first, but it makes sense if you think about it. Are there any mainstream political parties in the west that thinks food (arguably as essential as water) should be a human right (ie. the government provides it to anyone who wants it unconditionally)?
I cannot find any recent reports of anyone starving to death in New Zealand, for example. It would be national news if it happened and (rightfully) generate a lot of hand-wringing and introspection.
Just that the implementation gets complicated and politicised for various reasons.
Distributing food nationally is hard (consider cold chain, warehousing, distribution, managing expiry, dietary requirements, demand), so most welfare states distribute money instead and rely on the private sector to provide the infrastructure.
Giving people "free money" has it's own problems. It gets political. People moralise. Beneficiaries never have enough, they might not spend on food, and they often have worse food choices available to them.
Since the government distribute money and not food directly, they have to add strings to stop people "rorting the system". Those conditions can be a problem.
Food banks and free kitchens have to fill in the gaps where people inevitably fall through the beauracratic cracks in the welfare system.
People do go hungry when the system fails.
But the public view (multi-partisan) in well-off welfare states is that of course people have a right to live, and access to food is a part of that. It would be political suicide to suggest that anyone should be left to starve.
Is it guaranteed? ie. do you have to be disabled/retired to qualify, or is it open to everyone?
>Distributing food nationally is hard (consider cold chain, warehousing, distribution, managing expiry, dietary requirements, demand), so most welfare states distribute money instead and rely on the private sector to provide the infrastructure.
But then the food isn't guaranteed, is it? You're only really guaranteed money, which could be converted to food. Consider a hypothetical: let's say a country has a poll tax of $100 per person, then offsets it by giving everyone $100, is it fair to say that you have the right to vote in that country? Feel free to replace "right to vote" with other rights, such as freedom of speech, right to not self-incriminate, protection against unreasonable search and seizure.
You are correct but I feel perhaps missing the woods for the trees.
Every person's right tends to be someone else's obligation.
When obligations are met by state resources, there is then a responsibility to distribute fairly (because the resources come from everyone), this introduces hoops or conditions.
That doesn't mean that the right, or the obligation doesn't exist.
The need to ensure everyone gets food is absolutely part of the public understanding and discourse.
You can of course pick holes all day because yes, administering public welfare programs is hard.
Conditions where the state is obliged to do or provide something tend to be more complicated in practice than when the state is obliged NOT to do something (search and seizure, freedom of speech etc).
This just seems like the classic confusion between positive and negative rights. Many people view "rights" as only being negative rights - IE someone else/the government can't do X to you. Any talk of positive rights devolves into slavery, because at some point someone needs to do work to provide you with your positive rights, and what if they just don't want to?
That is - if water is a human right, is providing water to people required for that right? Who is on the hook for that? Who pays for the pipes, the drilling, all of the infrastructure and operations to extract and transport it? If the answer is the government, then that is fair enough since it is just really a collective of every member of society mutually providing each other their rights. But is Nestle denying someone their human rights if they don't give them a free glass of water?
How much water is a human right? We know what happens if you don't set a per-person limit to, at least, how much is free. But that's rationing (?) and evil, apparently.
I'm not entirely sure of the terminology, and I suspect there's a deliberate effort to ensure the idea of both government and free market supplies in tandem stays out of popular consciousness. See "death panels" for healthcare... if you can't compete with government, perhaps your business just isn't very good.
Alternatively, Universal Basic Income. Then, assuming your goal is to ensure people aren't dying due to lacking basics, you've only got one parameter to tune and one to monitor.
In anything with a cyclical component, being right "too early" and being wrong are very nearly the same thing, and certainly close enough as to make no difference.
Do you have an overview of his trading history that suggests he's "usually right"?
I agree this is ripe for abuse, but I also know enough about the CA water ecosystem to know it's a welcome development from an agriculture capacity planning perspective. There may be some speculators, but overwhelmingly the people trading this product will be water utilities and large farms who need multi-year planning for in particular tree crops. It looks like it's purely a cash backed contract and there isn't delivery, so it's going to just be used for hedging. Privatization of water is a huge issue especially in the developing world, but this isn't the same problem.
EDIT for clarification : water is a basic human right, but pumping 1 million acre feet to grow almonds and make bank is not.
What exactly does that mean? I agree that it would be nice if everyone could afford to have water, but it just doesn't seem the same as, say "the right to not be tortured", which is an abstract and not a commodity that a priori must have non-free infrastructure to provide to everyone.
It means the government should provide water to people that are thirsty and can't afford it. Dehydration is not something to let be inflicted on someone because they do not have cash, even if the money for the water comes from the people who are producing wealth in society. Losing a couple of dollars does not hurt you, thirst does hurt.
All rights are government-guaranteed. Who else? Your right to not be stabbed is enforced by the latent threat of prison and the police. Why would it matter if the right comes in form of an action (or prevention of one) or a physical good?
Because one of those things is materially rivalrous and it's important to acknowledge that. There is an explicit choice to distribute it politically, whereas something like police protection is inherently and unambiguously political.
Fwiw I don't think there's an inherent right to property.
Also the important thing is (presumably) you don't care who provides the water, just that humans get the water. Suppose fresh water were not the responsibility of governments, but NGOs, and everyone were provided water. Would you still consider it necessary "right"? Before you say "governments are more stable" I don't think there is any reason to believe that a government is more capable of equitably redistributing water to people in need; you money going to water is also wrapped up in money that goes to bomb people with different skin color halfway around the world, or XYZ things you don't care for your government to do; a nonprofit is typically slightly more focused in its mission and more effective at delivering that need, at least on a cost basis.
It's hard to make that argument with police forces; private police forces would probably be a terrible idea.
access to a fair trial and legal counsel, is absolutely free. The way to think of it is "the government cannot prosecute you without also providing you with those things". In theory, the part that costs society is the prosecution, not the fair trial. Of course, politicians these days don't couch it in those terms, so who knows anymore. Even the US does not protect any of the rights guaranteed in the first 10 amendments anyways (nope, not even the 3rd).
Nonetheless, the way that we practice enforcing the fair trial and legal counsel rights follows the theoretical structure: You can be acquitted of a crime if the state has failed to provide you with those guarantees, and that is when that "right" kicks in.
I'm not sure what the "right to an education is". I sure would like for everyone to get a good, free education (and I put my money where my mouth is), but I wouldn't call it a right.
I agree that tree crop farmers can really benefit from access to this type of product. I am a little concerned that this will only encourage even riskier nut development when the aquifers are already stressed as much as they are. I am still hopeful that California will consider something similar to cap-and-trade for water rights, but for now I guess we just have to wait and see what all those little SGMA districts come up with instead.
Why do they even need cap-and-trade? That would at most be a second best.
Just make water rights fully tradeable.
Of course, you might also want to remove grandfathered water rights. Good luck getting that past the lobbyists.
But even with the existing silly initial distribution of water rights, making them fully tradeable would increase efficiency:
The almond farmer would still get lots of water, but at least he'd turn into a former almond former and just sell his water on the market to someone with a better use.
> that this will only encourage even riskier nut development
What risks?
Farm income this year has tripled entirely because of subsidies. It is obviously completely and utterly irrelevant how you structure water markets or who's buying and selling what nuts, in a world where a 10 minute decision in an afternoon can 3x profitability.
The risks are to the water table in California. The current rate of ground water depletion is unsustainable. Sorry for being unclear about what avenue I meant by risk.
More things traded means more information and better prices. Runaway prices can function as a clear signal that there are problems in the water supply that need to be addressed. On the other hand, a stable market will be an indication that the infrastructure works, and prices will reflect that trade-off between speculators and market participants bearing risk, versus commercial users hedging to get stable future costs.
Markets are a wonderful creation and should be welcomed.
You are kindly ignoring speculation. What you presented is an efficient market hypothesis, however markets are not efficient. They invite speculation bubbles and they do crash.
No I did not. I merely pointed out that markets cannot change reality. They give you a view of reality.
Regarding this contract, it is financially settled. So there is no actual delivery of water, and it merely offers you an exposure to already existing prices of water in California.
If some machines trade stupidly high amounts of money because of some bullshit on twitter, what is the reality argument worth?
Meanwhile the reality of the average person on this planet doesn't have anything to do with the reasons for the largest trades on "the markets". So are those trades irrelevant for your general opinion or those people?
"The market" has become a sick abomination of capitalism. Trades are being made by people or machines which have nothing to do with the actual products. Absurdly complex products made even the trading process some sick meta-thing.
And you say this is reality? This is the reality the market CREATES not the reality it is supposed to reflect.
The market crashing over speculation is not going to harm the consumers of said commodity. Speculation is a tool to smooth out the price for the people who _don't_ want the risk, and offload it to those who _do_ want the risk!
Honest question, from an economically ignorant perspective:
If people hold houses to speculate with the price of real state, that makes the price I pay for the necessity of a place to live way more expensive than it would be otherwise (this is something I empirically know to be true).
Why doesn't the same logic apply to water once it's possible to speculate with it?
To your example. During the US housing price bubble (so called) that deflated 08; it was generally much cheaper to rent. So a user did not necessarily have to buy a house. And when you purchase real estate far beyond what is needed, then obviously you will have to rent because you can't occupy it all by yourself. The true price of living hasn't changed just because people are overvaluing real estate.
Consider water. Say a speculator drives the price way up in the sky to the extent that ordinary people are affected. What will said speculator do with these contracts? Either she will sell them (and the price rebounds), or she will be stuck with tons of water which is burdensome and incurs costs to store. So clearly she will want to sell this water and at that point be subject to the market demand for it.
In other words, undue speculation drives you out of business.
Now, regarding this future contract it is financially settled based on the actual index value of what water costs. So it's not capable of being driven by silly speculation at all.
>If people hold houses to speculate with the price of real state
...isn't that one of the problems with housing? It already allows for speculation, and in addition to that, it's heavily biased towards people speculating in one direction: up. People can be leveraged up to 20x (aka. 5% down payment), whereas for stocks it's limited to 2x[1]. There's also no meaningful way to short housing prices. You can't short-sell a house, and there aren't derivatives for housing (futures/options). The latter would also help increase supply because speculators can speculate on housing without tying up the underlying asset (ie. stories of speculators buying houses and leaving them vacant because they don't want to deal with the hassle/risk of tenants).
I just wish people would actually put effort into achieving these side effects instead of just alleging that they will emerge naturally out of the behavior of a bunch of random people betting on water scarcity. I am extremely skeptical the market will do all these extra things you claim it will do.
>I am extremely skeptical the market will do all these extra things you claim it will do.
Why are you so sceptical it won't do those things for water when it's done those things for other commodities? Ask a large scale farmer how worse off they'd be if they couldn't hedge their harvest risks with futures.
Because those other commodities are not water and Americans have a very bad habit of using cherry-picked anecdotes to justify poor management and decision-making.
Just stop pretending like you give a shit about anything other than money. I'm sick of being gaslit by people like you. Talk about prices. Play your money games. But please stop pretending like you actually know anything about the real world, just because you play with money all day.
Actually there's a pretty nice natural experiment in the US, because of the Onions Futures Act. There are several studies and some division between the experts on the details, but there's a strong case to be made for futures contracts reducing the volatility in these markets.
One thing that people don't tend to realize is that speculation happens anyway, it's just not made in a public manner and through other types of contracts. In fact, if futures do reduce volatility then they reduce speculation, since it's volatility what drives speculation profits.
Water is not onions. Bechtel managed to acquire control over water rights in Cochabamba, Bolivia in 1999. They started charging a licensing fee just to collect rainwater. Within a year there were hundreds of thousands out on the streets demonstrating, as the speculation didn't actually fix the water scarcity in the city. It just made it worse, with over half the population lacking access to fresh water.
Water is not onions. You cannot just talk about onions and pretend like you've said anything substantial about water futures.
What you are talking has nothing to do with a futures market, in fact is exactly the opposite, since what you are talking is a monopoly on water.
By the way, the reason the US has a prohibition for onion futures is that someone did actually corner the market for onions. Off course that would be very hard to reproduce nowadays.
People trying to explain to you why you are wrong is not the same as people gaslighting you. Your judgment seems to be heavily influenced by how you feel about people partaking in the stock market.
When you're done with the ad hominems, try reading and understanding what people are saying.
You're just shutting down because you're ashamed of how flawed and ignorant you are. When you learn to find joy in discovering your flaws, you will be a more effective person. More likely to survive and make money. You like money right?
Modern financial markets are extremely complicated. Not because all parts of the subject are complicated, but more of a result of a layer-upon-layer-upon-layer effect mixed with jargon.
Anyway, regarding this contract. What happens if a bunch of random people bet on water scarcity? Well, if there is no water scarcity they will simply lose all their money.
If there is water scarcity, however, this will be a clear signal of trouble ahead several weeks (or even months) before the scarcity becomes a real problem for real people.
Yes, these greedy speculators will earn a lot of money (from people hedging and from other speculators); but it will not be because of losses of ordinary people using water on a day-to-day basis.
Those people, if water scarcity sets in, will have to ask their supplier (the state I suppose? or are there private companies in CA?) why this is happening and solve the problem.
In the real world, farmers and consumers have been using standardized forward contracts to stabilize prices for eggs, butter, wheat, and corn since 1864.
Is solar affordable now? We had it quoted for our home, and to cover 60-75% of our annual usage, the system cost ~ 20x-28x our annual usage depending on which system we chose, with a life-span of, wait for it, 15 years and warranty of 10.
If it wasn't for heavy, heavy government subsidies in this space (some states match 50-75% of the up-front cost over the course of a year or two), I am not convinced it would be popular, at all, for regular Joe Schmoe.
Yes, the effeciency rate of solar is what makes it "worth it" or not, and within the last couple of years it has hit a sweet spot where in many to most cases it is "worth" the investment costs. That said, you need to watch out for unscrupulous installers not installing the latest panel tech, or installers who overcharge, etc, and it is preferable to research and utilize all available subsidies you can get your hands on (tax deductions, insurance, local electricity policies, etc).
The tech itself is at the right level now, it's the middle men and bureaucracies or bad rates that are the main problem. Source: family member who has overseen installation and maintenance of many major solar installations.
>effectively free electricity will make it dirt cheap
Effectively free? For a first world country, maybe. But the countries where water shortages are an actual life or death situation already have trouble getting a good enough power grid. Noone is going to show up to a village in the middle of Ghana and install solar panels for free so they can have water. This is a horribly first-world centric point of view.
Funny you should choose Ghana as an example. They have actually overbuilt their power generating capacity in recent years and are looking for ways to fruitfully soak up the excess electricity (e.g. electric vehicles https://cleantechnica.com/2020/07/20/ghana-pushes-for-adopti...)
> Noone is going to show up to a village in the middle of Ghana and install solar panels for free so they can have water.
There are plenty of organizations who will do exactly that. But I think I agree with the general slant of your comment, which is that much of the world will have to rely on the charity of the developed world to solve this problem for them. That charity is not guaranteed to be timely, effective, or predictable.
How does that make it a bubble? Evidently, you're here, as well as countless others arguing against it. The appearance of arguments you disagree with isn't evidence of a bubble but of a healthy discussion. A bubble would be if every single comment or near to it were espousing the same viewpoint.
While that might be true, if you asked 100 people on the street if water is a human right, 99 would say yes. In nearly every comment thread here there is at least one unique poster saying no.
Bubble may be the wrong word, but we certainly have many more people here that are far removed from the real world.
Definitely true. It's just that "bubble" means something, and that isn't "something you disagree with" even if those two coincide in most usages ("wow, the [other tribe] are all in such a bubble because of the youtube algorithm!").
Michigan is not lacking in water, and 1.1 million of gallons a day is pretty much a drop in a bucket. Like Michigan loses 10 000 times as much every day due to evaporation, for example.
Not having a lot of background on Michigan aquifers, but equating surface evaporation to ground water pumping is completely wrong in western states.
Surface evaporations is largely from water that is easily replenished on a relatively short timescale. Pumping groundwater at too high rates irreversibly decreases the groundwater reservoir capacity and even if it doesn’t, can take ages to replenish.
> Tangential, but is Michigan considered a western state?
It's typically considered a “Midwestern” state (a term which is kind of odd with the modern boundaries, since the “Midwest” is in the northern half of the country running, on the east-west axis, from the central part of the continental US fairly far to the east.)
I find that number dubious. I'd need some evidence that 1.1 million gallons is a drop in the bucket - I have trouble imagining that size of water, tbh. Looks like the Onassis reservoir in central park is a billion gallons. Honestly uncertain if 0.1% daily is drop in the bucket or not. I guess technically 0.1% of a 5 gallon bucket is about a tablespoon, so bigger than a drop.... Ooops, I got distracted.
> I'd need some evidence that 1.1 million gallons is a drop in the bucket
As I said, 1 million gallons of water evaporates from Lake Michigan every 10 seconds. That’s the deal: where water is abundant, it’s really abundant.
Almost all of the cost of municipal water, for example, is from building and maintaining the distribution system. In non-arid areas, there almost never is any shortage of water at the source, and water pricing is priced per use not because it costs that much to “produce it” or because the reservoirs are running short, but rather to limit the use so that there is no need to expand water carrying infrastructure.
If Nestle is building its own infrastructure, and the water is so abundant that there is absolutely no risk of it running anywhere close to short, why should the government or people care? Suppose Nestle builds a farm of windmills, that slows down a million gallons of moving air by 20 miles per hour every day. To be sure, they would be using up large amounts of natural resource, the wind energy. Should they pay significant fees for the privilege? I don’t think so; that would be completely ludicrous.
There are of course circumstances where Nestle should pay more. For example, if they were using water coming from government built and maintained infrastructure, or if the water was not so abundant as it is in Michigan. For example, if they were pulling it from deep aquifer that’s depleting faster than its refilling, as it is the case in many places of arid Southwest. But, to my knowledge, none of this is the case for Nestle in Michigan.
They do pay their fair share. Anyone in the state of Michigan can stick a straw in the ground and start sucking out water. If they suck out a lot, they have to pay a couple hundred dollars for a permit.
These rules are the same for farmers, industrial users (like car manufacturers), nestle, or you and me.
you and me are not a multinational billion dollar for-profit corporation. we have different capabilities, incentives, and externalities to our behavior. nestle is taking advantage of the commons for massive profit, they should contribute back
To say they are "taking advantage of the commons" implies they're leaving the commons worse off. I haven't heard any good arguments that this is the case. Particularly because the amount of water they're pumping really isn't that significant compared to agricultural or industrial users.
They do contribute back through taxes, including income tax their employees pay directly to the state of Michigan. If they aren't paying enough, I think reforming corporate taxation is a better solution than arbitrarily taxing extraction of a plentiful resource out of dislike for the extractors. Hopefully that doesn't make me some kind of anarcho-capitalist nut.
> To say they are "taking advantage of the commons" implies they're leaving the commons worse off
I don't agree. All it means is that they're benefiting privately from something that belongs to everyone. This is particularly glaring in this case because Nestle has a history of unethical behavior - for example, there is a plausible argument that one of the reasons why the Flint lead problem hasn't been fixed is because of profits on bottled water. Taxation is not a perfect solution because the government doesn't always use the funds ethically, particularly when it is in bed with corporations. But it's better than nothing.
> The amount of water they're pumping really isn't that significant compared to agricultural or industrial users.
Then why not have them pay a use fee that is proportionally small compared to agricultural and industrial users? If we don't charge them at all then logically why can't they just go ahead and privatize the entire water supply for the cost of $200? Natural resources shouldn't be made arbitrarily available for private profit.
Why should they subsidize home usage. If they are paying to pump their own water, and doing so in a sustainable matter, why do they own anyone anything?
Nestlé, a foreign non-US company, is also raiding another part of America, Florida, by pumping 1.1M gallons of groundwater per day from Ginnie Springs. The reason bottled water pumping is so much more damaging is because the water does not return back to the water aquifer once it is transported away.
Making water tradeable in the presence of scarcity will ultimately redistribute some water from where it’s plentiful to people who can pay more for it.
i.e it will even further increase inequality..
Of course it’s all rosy and perfect in free market Econ 101 theory land but that’s not how things tend to play out under conditions of inequality in knowledge and access to capital. One example is - if a speculator expects water to get scarcer in the future, they will buy it today and hold it completely unused just to sell it later. The same situation is playing out in the housing market in some cities and now empty homes taxes are being introduced. Of course no one will ever learn from real life, only half baked Econ theory so we will run into the same problems with water a decade later
There is no physical commodity changing hands unless the futures contract is held to expiry and delivery takes place.
It's not like this product enables speculators to hold on to water reserves better than they can currently. They'd have to have vast warehousing capabilities (or some lakes?) to actually sit on the physical product.
Sure, they can try to push the prices by cornering the liquidity in the futures market, but again, to actually have a sustained impact, they'd have to create a shortage in the physical market. This won't change with these derivatives.
> It's not like this product enables speculators to hold on to water reserves better than they can currently.
The presence of a liquid market where they can sell at low friction at all times is a big incentive to speculate. It’s the difference between speculating on rare trading cards or exotic wines and stocks.
I disagree with your statement on multiple levels. First, a highly liquid market tends to make speculation less profitable because your opportunities are arbitraged away that much more rapidly.
Second, speculators are not necessarily bad and add further liquidity to a market by taking the side that others may not be willing.
Third, a liquid market will of course still have speculators, but will be less vulnerable to distortion from truly malicious actors because it is more difficult to move a highly liquid market.
An illiquid and opaque market is worse in almost every sense. When things get bad, price discovery is much more difficult and bad actors can actually have outsized influence by cornering what little liquidity there is.
You seem to be biased against speculators, but the actors you should be actually biased against are market manipulators.
These aren’t water contracts as in “settlement in water” — they’re settled in cash and they’re water INDEX futures. There’s simply no way this will affect actual water shipments beyond maybe being used as hedge for water producers (which is rather unlikely).
This is wrong. Many contracts use cash settlement as an effective way to hedge against an increase in the cost of something. This product provides a hedge for water producers and consumers. To the extent water is a volatile-cost input into agriculture (perhaps an open question), this is likely to see significant usage.
This reminds me of the science fiction novel The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi. From the Amazon description:
"In the near future, the Colorado River has dwindled to a trickle. Detective, assassin, and spy, Angel Velasquez “cuts” water for the Southern Nevada Water Authority, ensuring that its lush arcology developments can bloom in Las Vegas. When rumors of a game-changing water source surface in Phoenix, Angel is sent south, hunting for answers that seem to evaporate as the heat index soars and the landscape becomes more and more oppressive."
this is the strongest signal yet that we're heading for a disaster as a civilization. if water can't get to people, people will get to water, or at least try to.
no, everthing is scarce on this material world and pricing items like water (accounting even ecological costs) could be a way to make people people/corps accountable of their choices.
I don't really mind water futures, as long as the nation I'm in makes it easy and affordable to access clean drinking water.
If the nation becomes to much of a dystopia I will just use my most powerful vote "my feet" and take my labor to some other nation.
People throughout history have done this for millennia. Just make sure you have a exit plan and easily transferable wealth storages.
That's great you have a plan but this is not really an option for much of the world's population and perhaps they should not suffer lack of water because of this.
> If the nation becomes to much of a dystopia I will just use my most powerful vote "my feet" and take my labor to some other nation
At some point you might run out of nations to go to.
I consider the place I currently live in (subjectively of course) to be the best in the world. The problem with that, with being at the top of the world, is that there is nowhere to run. If things get worse here, everywhere else is most likely even worse. So, for better or worse, I have to stay and defend my rights here.
Holy crap man for thirty seconds try to think about how you don’t represent the majority of the people. You know what, go trade water futures, you’re born for it.
This topic should be a collective home run for ethics, but the sheer stupidity of humans knows no bounds.
Sometimes you just need to call the antisocial personality disorders out (one whatever spectrum - narcissistic, sociopathic, borderline). A lot of the behavior of these disorders are tolerated if you are mostly harmless, but don’t think we can’t spot you.
Bunch of jerkoffs want to speculate on water, give me a fucking break.
The world is not a fair place and I got lucky that I was born in western Europe and did not made to many bad choices in life.
I have talked with people about rising house prices(because of the low interest rates) and stagnated wages for blue-collar workers here in the west,
how most of us in our late 20s or younger will probably never have a proper pension.
How cruel and unfair this hyper capitalist system really is, how we are quickly devolving back into techno feudalism.
How the youth is spending their future income by accruing massive debts to buy the latest gadgets and shit.
Reality is people don't fucking care, people don't want to care, they look at you as if your some kind of conspiracy theorist.
Once I discovered people don't really care about those structural problems, was the moment I started putting some money into a exit plan.
It’s stupid to think otherwise . If it came to a matter of national hunger due to crop water shortages or drinking water shortages the federal government would use the military to dig a fucking canal across the country if they needed to.
And drinking water shortages can't really occur: you could airlift water from Fiji and still have enough for everyone to drink. (Or more realistically and less flippant: the volumes involved for drinking water are so minuscule, that you wouldn't dig canals across the country. Just use a bunch of trucks.)
In any case, for a bet we'd need to operationalize exactly what we mean, and what conditions would count.
I am fairly sure that will hold for the next, eg, 50 years. Ie I am fairly sure that there won't be any circumstances that will make the governments involved break the compact. Willing to bet on that?
>“What this represents is a cynical attempt at setting up what’s almost like a betting casino so some people can make money from others suffering,” Basav Sen, climate justice project director at the Institute for Policy Studies
question that seems to have been neglected in this thread: how does the existence of a futures market over an asset affect the price of that asset? -'cause that's what the quote implies.
1) Water is a life necessity, but it can also be a superfluous want (e.g. lawns) and it can also be a greedy natural resource grab (e.g. Nestle). Generally speaking, we have enough water to go around for human needs, but people regularly use the emotional appeal of human needs to justify low prices for their wants or exploitation. At the very least, financial markets for water are devoid of shallow emotional appeals to morality and acknowledge it for what it is. All that I ask is that we always ensure that human needs are met, and that is a job for governments. Let financial markets work with the rest...hell, the government should probably sell what's left over to the highest bidders.
2) the real difficulty of selling water is infrastructure. It's expensive, and unlike most commodities, it is almost completely fixed-cost. And the vast vast hypermajority of water consumers only have a single feasible source of water producers. The idea of water futures, then, seems a little absurd. This essentially limits trading to only those who can feasibly take delivery, and in reality that limits you to the same single-source provider you've had from the very beginning. I can't help but think that auctions or dynamic pricing are a better and more efficient idea.
I suppose that most reactions will be against this, but it should however fix the "tragedy of the commons" problem where water is overused when it is cheep but still used when it's not.
It's a good financial incentive to better your installations.
Futures have nothing to do with better management of a resource, it's strictly a bet traders can place. If you are in favor of financial instruments to steer demand, a simple tax would work.
Creating water futures is completely tone-deaf. All it will cause is outrage and a backlash, a lot like trying to patent human genes.
Most water in the region isn't used for drinking -- there's plenty for that.
Example use case: almond farmer buys 0.5% of the current capacity of the reservoir at the now liquid market price, with delivery 6 months from now. Instead of having cyclical "rushes on the reservoir" for the remaining farming allotment of water in the reservoir whenever capacity gets low (or just unexpected bouts of no water coming out of the faucet, when transparency into reservoir levels is poor), resulting in less efficient water practices/ruined crops, liquid futures provide farmers with stability and actionable planning. If an almond farmer buys futures delivering a million gallons of water each quarter, he can expect that water to be saved and available when the crops need it, and can plan crops around that.
Other side effects: prices will be more transparent, liquid, and consistent across the region. Possible bonus: the financial incentive will potentially improve the quality of drought modeling in the region. Imagine future weather computers that use the futures price as an input.
> Most water in the region isn't used for drinking -- there's plenty for that.
I live in a densely populated region of the world where water tables have lowered due to droughts over the last couple of years while rain diminishes.
Groundwater is pumped by farmers over the summer, further lowing water tables to a point where water companies sound the alarm: if the water table lowers below a certain level, water stops coming out of the household water taps.
This literally happened this summers in a few municipalities. People didn't have access to clean water for basic hygiene, cleaning and drinking.
You might think "what's so bad about that? They can just buy bottled water, or install a storage tank?"
Well, this is a public health concern.
The big reason why diseases raged so easily in the past in the Western world - and still is in the rest of the world - was/is the lack of public access to clean water. Diseases such as Cholera are directly attributed to poor sanitation and lack of clean water.
Privatizing water sounds good in theory, but if the price of drinking water increases to prohibitive levels for less fortunate groups in society, you will also see an uptick in public health crises. The associated costs are - once again - deferred to the public (e.g. healthcare costs)
Water for drinking takes up a tiny fraction of uses. If this all becomes and open market, tons of wasteful crops like almonds will get wiped out way before drinking water is a noticeable expense
> Water for drinking takes up a tiny fraction of uses.
The argument isn't how much water is used for different purposes relative to each other in absolute terms.
The argument is availability. Fresh water isn't distributed equally across the globe. That's exactly what makes it a scarce commodity.
> If this all becomes and open market, tons of wasteful crops like almonds will get wiped out way before drinking water is a noticeable expense
As long as those almonds can be exported to profitable global markets, almond producers will be able to afford pumping up water / buying up water supplies, causing water related problems locally.
> As long as those almonds can be exported to profitable global markets,
They can’t though and that’s the point. They essentially don’t pay for the water from the Colorado river and if they paid the rate consumers are charged the cost of Almonds would 10x. Almond demand would likely fall 95% or so at that point and a lot less water would be wasted.
Americans are subsidizing almonds with free (or next to free) water while we bicker over the scraps of water leftover (restaurants not automatically pouring table water in CA).
> As long as those almonds can be exported to profitable global markets, almond producers will be able to afford pumping up water / buying up water supplies, causing water related problems locally.
The commenter you are replying to is implying that in many places, like California, by and large almonds won't be able to be grown profitably to be sold to the global market when you take water costs into account.
Access to global markets doesn't magically make everything profitable. (Often just the opposite for specific industries, because you'll also face global competition.)
What happens when there's a drought and the million gallons of water that farmer ordered can't be delivered?
What happens when speculators drive prices up because they know the people that actually need/want that water have to pay or risk losing their crops.
Water is important enough that it should be publicly owned and distributed. This is pretty much the only way it can be effectively managed and distributed, rather than hoarded and scalped as soon as the opportunity presents itself.
> What happens when there's a drought and the million gallons of water that farmer ordered can't be delivered?
That would be specified in the contracts. Existing contracts for eg soy beans already have to take these possibilities into account.
> What happens when speculators drive prices up because they know the people that actually need/want that water have to pay or risk losing their crops.
If current future prices are clearly higher than what I expect spot prices to be in the future, I'd sell future contracts and make a killing.
> Water is important enough that it should be publicly owned and distributed. This is pretty much the only way it can be effectively managed and distributed, rather than hoarded and scalped as soon as the opportunity presents itself.
What makes you think that public ownership and distribution is so effective? And what are the limits of these benefits, so that they only apply to important goods? Why wouldn't we want even goods of lesser importance enjoy these benefits?
> What makes you think that public ownership and distribution is so effective?
Its ability to address needs rather than wants. A free market does not distinguish between the need for people to drink and the need for a billionaire to fill his pool with freshwater in a drought.
This can extend beyond non-survival needs to societal needs. Society "needs" educated workers who can contribute to the economy. Society "needs" you to be connected to other workers either physically or electronically.
Public ownership allows us to address concerns that would not be appropriate to be driven primarily by profit motive. Typically we see this in the form of services rather than the direct transfer of physical goods. Most people believe communities in remote regions should have similar access to utility networks and transport, the ongoing cost of providing these typically outweighs the revenue that could be charged, so the state steps in.
The fire service is a fairly universal example of a service that should not be driven by profit motive and we have good records of the damage that occurs when they are. The military would be another, it is not in society's best interest if your primary form of defense is willing to work for whoever will pay it the most.
> And what are the limits of these benefits, so that they only apply to important goods? Why wouldn't we want even goods of lesser importance enjoy these benefits?
Current governance can be inflexible, it usually requires taking everyone's viewpoint into account to minimise the risk of failure or of being viewed as misspending public funds. Our solution to this at the moment is to allow private enterprise to operate in the areas where the extraction of profit is likely to cause minimal harm. This increases choice but the downside is that it introduces a huge amount of inefficiency and waste.
How does public ownership differentiate between needs and wants?
As far as I can tell, there's something that poor people have even less than money: influence and connections.
> The fire service is a fairly universal example of a service that should not be driven by profit motive and we have good records of the damage that occurs when they are.
Could you point me to those records?
As far as I can tell, Denmark does fairly well with privatized fire fighters. (And if memory serves right, the US, for mysterious reasons, has about twice as many firefighter per capita as other developed countries.)
From a more theoretical perspective, would you think that a mandate for people to buy insurance against fires (and especially against liability for spreading fires) or alternatively posting a big bond to self-insure, and leaving the rest of the workings to the market should work as well? What do you think?
My pleasure! It's an interesting topic of discussion, and I think there's a lot of value in trying to understand where other people are coming from and what their motivations are.
> Could you point me to those records?
The well known documentary "Gangs of New York"[1]. More seriously, in early Rome fire brigades were often used as a tool to extort the compromised property from it's owner. Forgive me for quoting Wikipedia, but the article and quote is fairly well sourced[2]:
> The first ever Roman fire brigade was created by Marcus Licinius Crassus. He took advantage of the fact that Rome had no fire department, by creating his own brigade—500 men strong—which rushed to burning buildings at the first cry of alarm. Upon arriving at the scene, however, the firefighters did nothing while Crassus offered to buy the burning building from the distressed property owner, at a miserable price. If the owner agreed to sell the property, his men would put out the fire, if the owner refused, then they would simply let the structure burn to the ground
There are also reports of firefighting gangs in the new york times before the advent of professional fire services in the U.S.[3]:
> Our reporters give an account of another incipient riot got up by firemen and runners last evening. For a time the brawl went on with great violence, and the rival factions or companies enjoyed the pleasure of trying to kill each other without let or hindrance, because—and here is the fact of main importance—"the Chief Engineer and his assistants had completely lost control of the men,"
The first professional fire brigades in the UK would leave your building to burn if you didn't have their particular company's mark on your building[4]:
> If a building was on fire, several brigades would attend as quickly as possible. The different brigades would use the fire marks to work out if a building was insured by their parent company. If they didn't see their specific fire mark attached to the building, they would leave the property to burn.
> As far as I can tell, Denmark does fairly well with privatized fire fighters. (And if memory serves right, the US, for mysterious reasons, has about twice as many firefighter per capita as other developed countries.)
Privatised fire fighters in Denmark are still beholden to the local municipality, which in my opinion is different enough from a privatised "user pays" fire service that they aren't hugely comparable.
The US is much less densely populated than Denmark and dealing with fires is a fairly time sensitive operation, I'd imagine that might explain part of the difference.
Thanks for the examples! However, I fail to be horrified by them.
Private fire brigades only putting out fires when people pay for them upfront seems all right to me. Everything else just promotes moral hazard. It's like always bailing out the banks after the fact, no matter how much risk they took up front.
Of course, today you wouldn't have marks on the building. We have much better paperwork and municipal maps these days, or you just use electronic means to keep track.
There are some externalities: when your building burns down, other buildings might catch fire too. So municipalities would be well with in their rights to tax uninsured buildings more, or even outright prescribe that all buildings be insured.
The latter is in some purist sense less 'free market' than having no special regulation at all; but I guess we can agree that it would be pretty close to free market fire fighting?
> The US is much less densely populated than Denmark and dealing with fires is a fairly time sensitive operation, I'd imagine that might explain part of the difference.
Canada and Australia might be more natural countries for comparison in that regard. Let me see whether I can find statistics for firefighter per capita.
(Btw, on the flip side, having less density also means that fires are somewhat more self-limiting compared to blazing through a dense city.)
Even the actions of Marcus Licinius Crassus as described seem fair to me. If he made a killing doing this business, surely some competition would spring up eventually ensuring that the discount the previous owner has to offer would become reasonable.
(Of course, that's all assuming fair play. Historically, Marcus Licinius Crassus probably kept competition at bay with threats of violence? Similar for the Gangs of New York.)
It’s a way for people who need water for processes to lock in prices. If you’re genuinely curious about why futures are useful, look into “commercial hedging”. It’s used by both suppliers and consumers to reduce price uncertainty (think of a farmer being able to buy water for the whole year).
I don't really see the relationship between futures and patent on human genes..
However, futures are NOT only for traders as you suggest.
Of course, a residential home will not use them, but when you become a big player in the field (see an Almond farm for example), then your water usage starts getting important and you can use these products.
Take a look at potato futures for example, they're used and useful. Some farmer's cooperatives don't hedge their prices and had some very bad news this year with covid and the impossibility to sell their yield.
I think people are afraid that instead of "tragedy of the commons", this will turn into "tragedy of the anticommons". e.g. a solution to global water shortages might be possible, but if it's not profitable then it won't happen.
> It's a good financial incentive to better your installations.
No it is not. The cost of water is so tiny compared to anything else on earth humans make that every single country on earth should be able to provide it to their citizens.
This is not a problem the market needs to solve. This has been solved since prehistory, and some of the first non-religious constructions celebrated in human history are waterworks.
This is a solved problem. All futures do is allow traders in faraway places make money off of a substance every human on earth ought to have a fundamental right to.
It’s not a solved problem. The Colorado river is oversubscribed and people are more or less fucked because we didn’t think paying for water in a bidding system was a good idea so now farmer Ted gets priority to grow his Almonds in the California desert for free while people in Nevada can’t get enough just to drink from the Colorado.
Solved? If you mean by energy-intensive, billion dollar solutions, you are correct. Look at the UAE, Saudi Arabia; no rivers, no lakes, and the aquifers were long ago exhausted.
The cost of water might be tiny if you're drinking it, but it's not tiny when you're using it to grow food or use it for other industrial processes. One almond kernel requires 3-4 days worth of drinking water to grow.
Also, humans in many places are using groundwater that's thousands of years old. In those places we can't observe any effect humans have had, because we're effectively tapping into reservoirs that predate human usage of that water. Eventually that's going to run out.
Like the "tragedy of the commons", it is artificially caused by concentration of power in the hands of the few. People were well able to coordinate use of the original commons; and if it weren't for belligerent ruling classes and corporate-commercial interests, the people of the world could have handled the water issue reasonably well to day.
You know what? Nobody asked that question before, and I find it a bit difficult to come up with an answer.
I suppose it just means "we consider access to this resource too important to deny it to anyone, whatever the reason". It's the ground upon which policy should be decided.
denying requires that there's a party to do the denying.
So when a developing country doesn't have access to clean drinking water, who is denying it? Someone from another country who _could_ have paid for the infrastructure? Their gov't?
Who are you referring to when you say "deny access to water"? Because if you are talking individuals, congratulations, you are actively calling for the death of individuals.
Water may be scarce, but the amount available still is much more than enough for living beings.
We could easily give any individual a 'basic water income' of, say, ten litres a day for drinking and cleaning.
Trading water wouldn't impact that kind of scheme. (Eg the government could just buy water at market prices and distribute as this basic income in kind.)
The important thing is that we DON'T have enough water for all uses we can dream off, like growing almonds in the desert.
So you need some kind of rationing. That means denying water to some uses.
Rationing via market prices is one of the most (economically) effective and just ways we have come up with.
(If you want to make some argument about how the water in a specific country should be the common good of everyone; you can still do the trading. Just have the government own all water sources, auction off the supply, and distribute the proceeds to everyone individually.)
The provider is still a debate, between letting private entities do it (which, as anyone that has seen private entities deal with such important things, know is a terrible idea), or the state. As to who is violating their rights, it depends. Are you in a fully remote place where it is almost physically impossible to get you water ? Undefined. Otherwise, the provider is expected to perform what is expected of them and bring you water, by any means necessary.
Sorry, but that link does not explain it. How does one resolve the conflict between a farmer that requires water to grow their food and a village where people want to do their laundry more often?
> which, as anyone that has seen private entities deal with such important things, know is a terrible idea
Reminder that in Flint, Walmart still provides safer water than the State.
> The provider is still a debate, between letting private entities do it (which, as anyone that has seen private entities deal with such important things, know is a terrible idea), or the state. As to who is violating their rights, it depends. Are you in a fully remote place where it is almost physically impossible to get you water ? Undefined. Otherwise, the provider is expected to perform what is expected of them and bring you water, by any means necessary.
Huh? Why place such a burden on the provider? Just let multiple providers compete on price and service as normal to determine how much effort is reasonable.
(That idea of competition doesn't preclude having municipal water works. As long as you don't ban private suppliers.)
Your water bill (theoretically) funds the infrastructure that treats and delivers your water. It's not as if you can bottle it at home and resell it on the market, in most cases you would need to set up a corporation and make an official deal with the relevant parties
This is like claiming that paying your garbage bill or firefighting bill (in places that charge for it) is "trading" your sanitation or protection from having your house burn down. They're services, not products.
I guess I don't understand the difference between paying for "water-delivery-and-treatment-infrastructure-and-operational-costs", and paying for "water". I can't fufil these water futures by just transferring legal ownership of a piece of land (that I owned) that contains a saltwater lake.
Even after defining what the difference is... I'd be interested in understanding what makes trading in "water-delivery-and-treatment-infrastructure-and-operational-costs" OK, but trading in "water" not OK
When you buy bottled water you're buying water by volume at a price set by the company that manufactured it, pre-packaged. They set the price based on the costs they incur to bottle it - beyond what you would pay to get the same water as a civilian, in part because creating shelf-stable bottled water is more difficult and expensive than producing regular tap water. To get water, that factory is paying for delivery and treatment infrastructure and ongoing maintenance costs for their equipment. Your water bill similarly covers those ongoing costs. If you buy a pack of bottled water and it leaks, nobody from the bottling company is going to come patch that hole and refill the bottle.
This is almost the same as the distinction between paying your electricity bill and buying a pre-charged battery.
The main difference is the isn't any speculation involved.
No one have the financial incentive to create artificial scarcity.
This is a major advantage when talking about the most basic of life needs.
As an ordinary civilian I can't buy a year's worth of electricity and stack it up in the corner of my house (some sort of enormous tesla powerwall aside), and I can't buy a year's worth of tap water and store it in a giant tank in my bedroom. Doing that sort of thing would require a bunch of infrastructure that I don't own. Instead, I pay monthly to have both electricity and water available on demand, and the cost is based on how much I use. Long-term storage like that also would introduce additional problems, like the passive discharge of batteries or the need to store water in special containers that won't leach chemicals into it and won't allow the growth of naturally occurring algae.
For water I could certainly buy a bunch of bottled water and keep it in the kitchen, but how am I going to run that through my faucets to wash my hands or run it through my showerhead? You can certainly do all that - and people in areas with limited access to tap water have to - but it's not something the average person is going to do.
Where your tap water comes from is also a factor here. When I lived in a rural area growing up, our water was well water - there was literally no way for us to stock up a month worth of that in advance, because we relied on the natural return of water into the soil to ensure we had a supply to draw from in the well. Things like desalination also have limited throughput, so if you max that out the only way to get more water is to take it from someone else.
I see no problem with this, so long as the CME also allows futures contracts based on the chance of at least one CME board member being assassinated in a given month.
i have written several times about CME water futures contracts. i thought i posted this on HN during this round of news releases, but i guess i didnt.
long story short: it is for the almond farmers. but its more complicated. i have been pursuing agtech and SV for small farm ag robotics for 5-6 years now and only have had doors shut on my face.
consistently, VCs flock towards agtech opp that are data harvestors. agree that data is crucial for deployment of autonomous systems, ai and robots in the field, but the weird thing was that they were coming up with stuff that farmers didnt need. they were creating entire new categories of data that wasnt necessary before and selling that to farmers who didnt even know that they needed it.
there are diff kinds of ag and my focus was on small acreage sub 100 acre farming that needed automation in the field to eliminate labour and bring down labour costs. AI has very little value. but agtech in the past 5-6 years has been collecting and collating so much data. and i knew that it wasnt for the farmers. it was always..ALWAYS for wall street. but i was looking at commodity trading..like hogs, grain, soy and fibre. i was looking at what data they were collecting about water and fertilisers/herbicides/pesticides...so that they can use that data to sell more inputs to the farmers.
and let's not forget seed. in 2017, dow and dupont merged. the corteva cropscience was spun off this merger and began trading as a separate company. at the same time, sygenta was sold off to chemchina. and of course, bayer bought out monsanto. this is a consolidation of a handful of companies that have complete control over seeds, pesticides, herbicides, fertilisers, gene patents and biosciences. and now, data. sweet sweet..fat juicy agtech DATA! all you have to do is say AI and then twirl three times chanting 'blockchain blockchain blockchain' while rubbing the top of your head...VCs will rain wads of cash over you. Data makes the world go round.
they consolidated and started investing in agtech and robotics and ag machinery sector(hello, JD!) wanted to join in, but DoJ kept squashing the promised mergers. now..remember, ALL of this is traded in the exchanges ALL OVER THE WORLD. not just wall street. ag has to be 'managed'. you need data for that. i could go on that tangent, but its not needed now. (example: climate corp was part of monsanto. but bayer didnt get a piece of it. DCVC was monsanto's VC arm and has since dissolved.) and then the story of california's stolen water from the rio grande and the grandfathering of water rights and the patchwork quilt of various water rights sharing agreement, its a maze and noone really understands that mess. (i can recommend cadillac desert by marc reisner..that was the basis for polanski's movie china town starring jack nicolson and later LA confidential starring russell crowe/kevin spacey. also recommeded fiction reading..waterknife by paolo bacigalupi)
anyways, back to water...we now know how much water all the crops need when agtech is unleashed in..let's take ca as an example...salinas' lettuce field(1+billion) or strawberry fields or almond orchards in central valley. each one of the crops have about a billion dollar ave revenue in a 45 billion dollar california ag revenue. wonderful company owned by the resnicks, for example..(pom, halos, cuties etc) has about $4 billion revenue annually. oh. privately held or as ag co-ops.
and then there is the dairy and ranching industry. hay/alfafa esp ..which is a good export crop and goes to china in the returning empty shipping containers during our droughts to provide fodder for china's fledgling and largely parched dairy industry because they may have cows, but their aquifers have run dry. ca has so many ag revenue streams but so diverse. agtech start ups found out that they can not only collect data and can consildate it and sell it to various publicly traded companies..perhaps they dont(its illegal), but the information can be used for other products. for example, safeway and walmart are publicly traded and strawberry industry's data has immense value to them. we are not talking soy and wheat or hogs that is the mid western specialty.
but even with the diversity of data, most of it is noise. capturing signal from noise is profitable enough. but consider this..what is common for ALL of ag sector. water. we all need water. be it an one acre boutique farm or a 15000 acre commodity crop growing mid western farm. we need water. and is it any surprise that this can be traded as futures?
while its packaged as something to hedge because of the recent spate of wildfires and drought and what not in california, the real reason has always been about how this can be used to trade on wall street. agtech has ALWAYS been about wall street and harvesting of data that can be exploited for speculative trade. it was never about the food. that's why i cannot still find a reasonable streamlined solution for labour cost cutting ag robotics for sub 100 acre farms. because we still import most of our food and food growing farms are all really hobby farms. the agtech we need is consumer level and not industrial scale like VC backed agtech.
This is just embarrassing. Today I’m ashamed, once again, of being human.
Sometimes you have to spell it out for these animals, life, liberty, pursuit of happiness, and water you dumb animals, and water too, why must this be said?
If social media shaming should be used for anything, it should be used for this.
No. Water is already bought and sold for money in California. Now a company allows for people to make bets on how those prices are expected to change. That's the development. Adjust your outrage accordingly.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-12-06/water-fut...