denverpost | In November, I watched the two parts of Ken Burns’ new documentary
film, “The Dust Bowl.” The film presents a lesson for us today.
When farmers first arrived in the large area surrounding the Oklahoma
Panhandle, the ground was covered with hardy buffalo grass that firmly
protected the soil from erosion by the wind. Then each farmer acted
freely and independently to do what was economically best for him. He
plowed up the buffalo grass and planted wheat. The more land he plowed
and planted, the greater was his income. Almost a decade of very low
rainfall dried up the land, but the farmers hung on, plowing up even
more land and hoping that there would be rain next year. Most
important, there were no government agencies interfering with the
freedom and independence of the farmers by trying to promote
conservation or to limit the acreage of buffalo grass that was being
plowed. The collective action of all of the individual farmers, each
acting in his own best interest, resulted in the buffalo grass being
stripped from enormous areas of the Great Plains. When the wind started
blowing over the exposed soil, the dust began its assault on all living
things in the area and beyond. The suffering was so severe as to be
difficult to imagine.
A few doomsday voices pointed out the destructive consequences of
the elimination of the buffalo grass over such a large area but these
voices were ignored by the farmers who resented any suggestion that
their agricultural practices were responsible for the disaster. The
relief and public works programs initiated by President Franklin
Roosevelt provided some immediate help to the suffering people, allowing
them to hang on a bit longer.
The lesson I got from this is that when you have large numbers of
individuals practicing free enterprise in an unregulated society, with
each individual (or today it could also be each company) acting in his
or her (or its) best interest, the result can be disastrous to all. The
great recession that started around 2008 is only the most recent
example of this. These are examples of the “Tragedy of the Commons” in
real life just as Garrett Hardin portrayed it.
The long-term solution of the Dust Bowl problem came only after the
Federal Government purchased large areas of farmed grassland and
replanted these areas in grass to create national grasslands. What the
free and independent farmers had destroyed, the “socialistic” Federal
Government restored.
2 comments:
So what is the effect of 60 years of planned obsolescence when economists are technological nitwits who can't even figure out if it is happening?
Do you mean economists can't figure out if planned obsolescence is happening, or, can't figure out if anthropogenic climate change is happening?
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