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True Cost Pricing

Posts in this category are about True Cost Pricing. True Cost Pricing makes it possible to enhance Natural Capital, Social Capital, and Economic Capital by reducing taxes on good things like personal income and replacing them with new taxes and fees on bad things like pollution, natural resource consumption, unjust working conditions, and so on. Such a tax shift is revenue-neutral. It does not increase the overall tax burden – it will likely reduce it substantially over time – but simply reallocates it to create efficient markets. By using carefully calculated taxes to incorporate social and ecological costs and benefits into prices, it is possible to create a level playing field for Bioregional Economies.

(Adapted from ConservationEconomy.net)

Insurance Costs to Increase 'Modestly' for Offshore Energy Risks

Source: NewsBlaze Environment - Posted: July 28, 2010 09:06
Major losses sustained in the Gulf of Mexico will not have the same market-changing impact on the upstream energy insurance market as other major events such as Hurricane Katrina, according to a new report published by Marsh.
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Are There Cheap Natural Beauty Products?

Source: The Daily Green News - Posted: June 18, 2010 17:11
Are you overwhelmed by the cost of organic beauty products? Natural makeup artist Jessa Blades suggests some great beauty bargains.
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Taxing carbon: Worth a go

Source: The Economist Environment - Posted: June 17, 2010 07:20

Designing the tax is not uncomplicated, but it is a promising way forward

THIS newspaper has long advocated a carbon tax as the best way to deal with a warming climate. This month we asked Cambridge Econometrics, an economic-modelling firm, to assess the impact of a carbon tax on the economy. To keep things simple and allow for gradual adjustment, we proposed that it should raise revenues equal to 1% of GDP by 2020, and that other policies with similar objectives (fuel duty, subsidies for renewable energy, Britain’s membership of the European emissions-trading scheme—the ETS—and so forth) would be abolished or cut back.

The results are surprising. A frequent worry about carbon taxes is that they will hurt business and the economy. But in our simulation Britain’s economic performance would improve. Despite raising an extra GBP11 billion in net revenue by 2015 and GBP18 billion by 2020, our carbon tax (GBP31 a tonne in 2015) would help economic performance, not hamper it. Output would be 1.2% higher by 2020 than under the current arrangements. ...


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