Wednesday, April 06, 2011

Good stuff from Gonder on development and externalities.

It's always nice to see an elected official going beyond a spreadsheet to make community development and the value of the commons a part of economic calculations.

GONDER: Brake or Gas

In each of these examples, with which all Americans are familiar, we can see that large developments do, in fact, deliver some benefits, but they do so at quite a cost. The success of these large ventures is built upon a sturdy foundation of costs shifted from the developer, the owner, the schemer, onto the citizens of the host communities. These shifted costs are sometimes referred to as externalities. Externalities are imposed upon the commons, that which we by right of our citizenship or residence own and share in common with our fellow citizens or neighbors--air, water, open land, places or things too big to be hauled in, tied down or titled with the aid of an enviable checkbook.

1 comment:

  1. ...it's just scary it's 50 years overdue.

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