Paying Too Much for Energy? The True Costs of Our Energy Choices
Author(s)
Greenstone, Michael; Looney, Adam
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Energy consumption is critical to economic growth and quality of life. America's energy system, however, is malfunctioning. The status quo is characterized by a tilted playing field, where energy choices are based on the visible costs that appear on utility bills and at gas pumps. This system masks the “external” costs arising from those energy choices, including shorter lives, higher health care expenses, a changing climate, and weakened national security. As a result, we pay unnecessarily high costs for energy. New “rules of the road” could level the energy playing field. Drawing from our work for The Hamilton Project, this paper offers four principles for reforming U.S. energy policies in order to increase Americans' well-being.
Date issued
2012-04Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of EconomicsJournal
Daedalus
Publisher
MIT Press
Citation
Greenstone, Michael, and Adam Looney. “Paying Too Much for Energy? The True Costs of Our Energy Choices.” Daedalus 141.2 (2012): 10–30. Web. 4 May 2012.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0011-5266
1548-6192