Seeing Green ... A Roundup of the North Carolina "Green" Budget

North Carolina’s proposed budget for the next biennium is peppered with nods to Big Green. As the following highlights from the House budget (HB 1473) reveal, these measures show that the state is embracing bad economics in an attempt to save mother earth:

Some of the above items are a result of the natural tendency of government to expand; others are a result of a confluence of recent factors:

Instead of showering gifts upon green industries, state legislators truly worried about global warming and the environment should do some things that might actually help. For example, North Carolina could pressure the federal government to lift the moratorium on constructing new nuclear power plants. Nuclear energy is renewable, produces no CO2, and is very competitive with fossil fuels. The state should also stop subsidizing agriculture (particularly for biofuel related products) and encourage the federal government to do so as well. The environmental costs of agriculture subsidies can be terrible (as with Brazilian sugar and Amazonia), but are rarely mentioned by bureaucrats pandering to green constituents who are clueless about unintended economic and environmental effects. Finally, most people care about the environment and love the natural beauty of North Carolina. People who get to keep more of their paychecks are more likely to invest in environmental stewardship projects, conservation (land and water) trusts, and green nonprofit groups. Why not allow citizens to direct their money to those environmental causes that are deemed appropriate and effectual? Indeed, legislators might offer more tax incentives to get taxpayers to do so.

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