Raj Patel

Raj Patel

Posted: February 8, 2010 04:05 PM

Cheaponomics

What's Your Reaction:

Here's a top ten list of things that aren't as cheap as you think.

#10 Bottled Water - Bottled water sounds like it should be cheaper - it's 200 to 10,000 times more expensive than tap water. But in the US, the annual energy wasted on bottled water adds the equivalent to 100,000 cars on roads and 1 billion pounds of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. And the price we pay for water doesn’t begin to address the longer term issues of global shortage for something that everyone needs to survive. Make a start: stop your local government from wasting your money on bottled water, as we did in San Francisco.


#9 Cellphones - We've all got them. The trouble is that one of the minerals inside our high tech toys - coltan - is bought very dear indeed. With around three quarters of the world's reserves of coltan in the Democratic Republic of Congo, our demand for gadgets fuels bloody conflict and vast human suffering. The No Blood on My Cellphone campaign shows how we can stop it.


#8 Double cheeseburger – A value meal is a great way to eat if you've neither time nor money but this cheap food turns out to be 'cheat food'. What if we had to pay the full environmental, labour and health costs of a burger? Some researchers think we'd end up paying over $200, and that doesn't include the modern day slavery in our North American sandwiches.


#7 Fish fingers - The world's oceans are being emptied. When I was a kid, our fish fingers were made of cod. Now the species is commercially extinct, and we're within a generation of killing everything in the seas. Yet the price of fish is still just a few dollars a kilo.


#6 A Free Lunch - Rudyard Kipling came across the free lunch in the nineteenth century in San Francisco, where he "paid for a drink and got as much as you wanted to eat. For something less than a rupee a day a man can feed himself sumptuously in San Francisco, even though he be a bankrupt." But the freebie ends up being a way to reel you in to consume more. And, yes, my own book is being sold this way too, with a free chapter and video . There’s no moral high-ground for me – I’m a moral low-ground sort of person. But that doesn’t stop me from encouraging folk to get the book from a library.


#5 Googling - Would it shock you to know that two Google searches produces the equivalent greenhouse gases of making a cup of tea. The London Telegraph reported this last year , and while Google denies it, it's certainly true that global information technology is responsible for 2% of all greenhouse gases.


#4 Toxic waste - Larry Summers, President Obama's chief economic adviser, was once a senior economist at the World Bank. When he was there, he wrote in a confidential but since widely cited memo that "Just between you and me, shouldn’t the World Bank be encouraging MORE migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [Less Developed Countries]?" He argued that poor people valued a clean environment less than the rich, and so pollution should flow to them. And it has, with rich countries dumping their pollution on poor ones, undervaluing their lives and the damage it causes.


#3 Low income jobs. Part of the reason that food and energy are cheap is so that working peoples' wage demands are kept in check. In Canada, average real wages have increased by just 1% in two decades - and in the US similar long term trends for working class people (and severe declines in the value of minimum wages.)

But around the world, minimum wages fall far below what families need to survive.


#2 Gas - The way we live to day depends on our not paying the full costs of fossil fuel - with thousands already dying and many billions being lost right now. While figures of $65 trillion a year for the real cost of fossil fuel are almost certainly wrong, with 300 million people affected, it's already a disaster. We need to bring our governments to heel if we’re to leave a world worth living in to our children.


#1 Women's work - The world wouldn't turn without the work of raising children, and caring for family and community. But it's the work that is most often and quite literally taken for granted. If the work that women did were to be paid, how much would it cost? Researchers put it at $11 trillion in 1995, or half the world's total output. Movements demanding a basic income grant are laying the foundations for this new way of working and living. Valuing women's work would, more than any other single thing, transform the way we think about our economy and society.


Update

Here are some other links from groups involved in coltan, toxic waste, and food. Feel free to suggest others in comments.

This post originally appeared on Raj Patel's website.

 
Here's a top ten list of things that aren't as cheap as you think. #10 Bottled Water - Bottled water sounds like it should be cheaper - it's 200 to 10,000 times more expensive than tap water. But in t...
Here's a top ten list of things that aren't as cheap as you think. #10 Bottled Water - Bottled water sounds like it should be cheaper - it's 200 to 10,000 times more expensive than tap water. But in t...
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Diagoras   01:09 AM on 3/17/2010
This is frustrating. Sure I'll commit to, next time I need to buy one, buying a Coltan-free cell phone just as soon as someone please tells me who sells them! How do I know the one I have now is not already Coltan-free? And if someone tells me something is Coltan-free why should I believe them? Couldn't they just lie?
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carrieanna   02:47 AM on 2/10/2010
It's strange because I was brought up with the importance of value and in just a few decades we've devolved into cheapest-is-best mentality. This is why I loathe so-called value stores like Target and Wal-mart. Their stuff is cheaply made...hiding the real costs of the labor, shipping and materials that went into the production process. People complain about the loss of jobs in American production but don't bat an eye when buying cheap crap from hyper-marketed dimestores.

Is it that we've been conditioned that things will break so why not just get the cheapest thing to begin with? And people have bought the advertising hype to have the latest gadgets even if the current ones we have are still working?
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reader1   09:07 PM on 2/09/2010
You can charge for anything as long as you are in control of printing the money. These things are worthless. Great article!!!
sheila   02:51 PM on 2/09/2010
Don't forget so-called "renewable energy" that is sited in our wilderness instead of in our built environment. The enormous ecosystem and carbon sink losses that will result from Big Solar and Big Wind, the HUGE amounts of water wasted in thermo-electric power (yep, concentrating solar) and the massive SF6 emitted by Big Transmission (possibly the most harmful of all GHGs) plus the concrete, steel and construction emissions, dead species and erosion/dust issues all add up to a MASSIVE EXTERNALIZATION OF COSTS with a privatizing of profits in.... Big Energy mercenaries like Chevron, Shell, GE, BP and Big Banks like Goldman Sachs (aka Cogentrix).

Yep, in yet another way, Big Energy IS THE PROBLEM, NOT THE SOLUTION, and we need to fight much harder for clean, point of use energy solutions including widespread efficiency upgrades, rooftop solar, microwind, passive designs, etc. Decentralizing, cleaning and democratizing the grid must take place WITHIN THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT or we are just adding to the cumulative ecosystem death, upwards redistribution of wealth and disempowerment of our country.
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zizizzi   01:31 PM on 2/09/2010
Here's a short video about what things actually cost.

http://www.storyofstuff.com/
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Sashalezhnev   12:00 PM on 2/09/2010
On cell phones, a new campaign to help companies make conflict-free phones, led by the Enough Project, is at http://www.enoughproject.org/conflict-minerals There is also pending legislation in Congress on making conflict-free electronics, the Conflict Minerals Trade Act. See the Enough link for more info.
lilpeg   09:18 AM on 2/09/2010
#1 is so true. I am a woman, I've never gotten paid for my "homemaking". When I work outside the home I have to pay others to do my "housework". It gets expensive. When I do it myself, it is "free?". That is what society assumes.... Every now and again there is an article in the paper saying I am worth about $100K a year, would that I could see half that money come my way!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam Bomb   04:12 AM on 2/09/2010
How much CO2 was released due to the writing of this article? How much CO2 is released because HuffPost exists? Or everybody's computer who reads it? I wonder how much CO2 would be released by us eliminating CO2 emissions... Well now I'm just rambling.
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lbrty 2112   07:17 AM on 2/09/2010
If we could all just stop breathing. Imagine the kind of world we'd .......... .....

Oh.. Nevermind
Zip Ominous   12:54 AM on 2/09/2010
Maybe the best article I've ever seen on Huffpo.
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quillsinister   11:12 PM on 2/08/2010
This does not surprise me. We've become experts at externalizing and deferring the consequences of our lifestyles, but I think this approach will not be viable for too much longer. It's the TANSTAAFL principle, which is really just the laws of thermodynamics applied to the economy.

Eventually, everything is paid in full. With money, or tears, or blood. I expect we'll have to pony up sooner than most of us would care to admit.
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Iam12Vote   10:02 PM on 2/08/2010
I'm always surprised to find that the cost of maintaining at least 1 aircraft carrier battle group in the Persian gulf at all times plus whatever ground personnel we have committed to the region to secure oil supplies is neither billed back to oil producers in the form of taxes or counted in the cost of energy delivered to the US.

Those costs also extend into our oil dependent food production and the cost/value of all farm commodities.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillsinister   10:26 PM on 2/08/2010
Add to that the fact that a single cruiser or destroyer, each of which is powered by a total of seven gas turbine engines, will burn about five million gallons of fuel in an average six-month deployment. That's every surface combatant on every deployment. And we've kept a steady stream of them going through the Middle East for decades.
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Lisa Ryder   09:39 PM on 2/08/2010
Plastic almost out of my house, stopped eating fish because over fishing and pollution, still have an iPhone :-( going off the grid is difficult. I try and keep my money with community and away from big money pockets
onceler   04:54 PM on 2/08/2010
Interesting, thought-provoking stuff. Gads I hate Larry Summers...

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