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Subject:
From:
Spencer Banzhaf <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 14 Feb 2024 08:18:21 -0800
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All,
The forum has been a bit quiet lately so maybe I can mix things up with a
trivia question.

A common example of externalities in textbooks and articles in the 1970s
and '80s was the case of a factory whose smoke made it more costly for the
laundromat to clean clothes (e.g. Baumol & Oates textbook 1975; J.
Buchanan, Natural Resources J., 1973).  When I was a student, I used to
think that this was a very whimsical example, but Pigou mentions it as
early as Wealth and Welfare (1912), it was included in late 19th C.
discussions of the smoke nuisance in the UK, and, as my colleague Randy
Walsh and I have discussed in a recent paper, it was quantified by
economists in Pittsburgh in 1913.

The trouble is, we are having a hard time tracing this example from 1912-13
to the 1970s textbooks.  Medema has suggested that, in general, there is a
gap in the lit from Pigouvian external economies to 1970s environmental
externalities.  We are interested in the very specific case of this laundry
example.  Does anybody have any examples they could share of economists
between 1912 and, say, 1973 using this example to illustrate externalities
(loosely defined)?  Recognizing that the term "externality," is changing
over time, when did this become codified as a "classic example"?

Thanks for your thoughts and speculations,
Spencer
PS -- for those who prefer to write offline, please include Randy Walsh,
who is cc'd here (not registered w SHOE).
———————————————————————————-
H. Spencer Banzhaf
Professor, NC State University
Director, Center for Environmental & Resource Economic Policy


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