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Assignment 2: Poverty and Pollution Case Study Due Week 8 and worth 300 points Read Case 7.2 titled "Poverty and Pollution," prior to starting this assignment. Write a 6-8 page paper in which you:...

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Assignment 2: Poverty and Pollution Case Study
Due Week 8 and worth 300 points

Read Case 7.2 titled "Poverty and Pollution," prior to starting this assignment.

Write a 6-8 page paper in which you:
  1. Determine the ethical implications of businesses polluting in a third world country. Explain your rationale.
  2. Suggest the reasons a business may conduct operations in a third world country and disregard any standards of pollution control.
  3. It has been said that pollution is the price of progress. Assess the connections between economic progress and development, on the one hand, and pollution controls and environmental protection, on the other.
  4. Support the argument that human beings have a moral right to a livable environment regardless of the country they live in.
  5. Take a position on whether wealthy nations have an obligation to provide poorer nations with, or help them develop, greener industries and sources of energy. Explain your rationale.
  6. Propose a plan for uniform global pollution control standards and how you would enforce them.
  7. Use at least three (3) quality references. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not quality as academic resources.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
Poverty and Pollution

From: Moral Issues in Business 8th ed. Shaw & Barry (pp XXXXXXXXXX)

It is called Brazil's "valley of death," and it may be the most polluted place on Earth. It lies about an hour's drive south of Sao Paulo, where the land suddenly drops 2,000 feet to a coastal plane. More than 100,000 people live in the valley, along with a variety of industrial plants that discharge thousands of tons of pollutants into the air every day. A reporter for National Geographic recalls that within an hour of his arrival in the valley, his chest began aching as the polluted air inflamed his bronchial tubes and restricted his breathing.

The air in the valley is loaded with toxins--among them benzene, a known carcinogen. One in ten of the area's factory workers has a low white blood cell count, a possible precursor to leukemia. Infant mortality is 10 percent higher here than in the region as a whole. Out of 40,000 urban residents in the valley municipality of Cubatao, nearly 13,000 cases of respiratory disease were reported in a recent year.

Few of the local inhabitants complain, however. For them, the fumes smell of jobs. They also distrust bids to buy their property by local industry, which wants to expand, as well as government efforts to relocate them to free home sites on a landfill. One young mother says, "Yes, the children are often ill and sometimes can barely breathe. We want to live in another place, but we cannot afford to."

A university professor of public health, Dr. Oswaldo Campos, views the dirty air in Cubatao simply as the result of economic priorities. "Some say it is the price of progress," Campos comments, "but is it? Look who pays the price--the poor."

Maybe the poor do pay the price of pollution but there are those who believe that they should have more of it. One of them is Lawrence Summers, chief economist of the World Bank and subsequently Secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He has argued that the bank should encourage the migration of dirty, polluting industries to the poorer, less developed countries. Why? First, Summers reasons, the costs of health-impairing pollution depend on the earnings forgone from the increased injury and death. So polluting should be done in the countries with the lowest costs--that is, with the lowest wages. "The economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest-wage country," he writes, "is impeccable."

Second, because pollution costs rise disproportionately as pollution increases, it makes sense to shift pollution from already dirty places such as Los Angeles to clean ones like the relatively under populated countries in Africa, whose air Summers describes as "vastly under-polluted." Third, people value a clean environment more as their incomes rise. If other things are equal, costs fall if pollution moves from affluent places to less affluent places.

Critics charge that Summers views the world through "the distorting prism of market economics" and that his ideas are "a recipe for ruin." Not only do the critics want "greener" development in the Third World, but also they are outraged by Summers's assumption that the value of a life--or of increases or decreases in life expectancy--can be measured in terms of per capita income. This premise implies that an American's life is worth that of a hundred Kenyans and that society should value an extra year of life for middle-level manager more than it values an extra year for a blue collar, production-line worker.

Some economists, however, believe that Summers's ideas are basically on the right track. They emphasize that environmental policy always involves trade-offs and that therefore we should seek a balance between costs and benefits. As a matter of fact, the greatest cause of misery in the Third World is poverty. If environmental controls slow growth, then fewer people will be lifted out of poverty by economic development. For this reason, they argue, the richer countries should not impose their standards of environmental protection on poorer nations.

But even if economic growth is the cure for poverty, other economists now believe that sound environmental policy is necessary for durable growth, or at least that growth and environmental protection may not be incompatible. First, environmental damage can undermine economic productivity. Second, poverty itself is an important cause of environmental damage because people living at subsistence levels are unable to invest in environmental protection. Finally, if economic growth and development are defined broadly enough then enhanced environmental quality is part and parcel of the improvement in welfare that development must bring. For example, 1 billion people in developing countries lack access to clean water while 1.7 billion suffer from inadequate sanitation. Economic development for them means improving their environment. Still, rich and poor countries have different environmental concerns: Environmentalists in affluent nations worry about protecting endangered species, preserving biological diversity, saving the ozone, and preventing climate change, whereas their counterparts in poorer countries are more concerned with dirty air, dirty water, soil erosion and deforestation.

The End

Answered Same Day Dec 23, 2021

Solution

David answered on Dec 23 2021
119 Votes
Running head: POVERTY AND POLLUTION 1
Poverty and Pollution
Student’s Name
Subject
University
Date
Running head: POVERTY AND POLLUTION 2
Poverty and Pollution
Introduction
In the case study, Cubatão, a developing yet poor region in Brazil, is called as “valley of
death” due to high amount of the pollutants present in that area. Of course, it is the local
industry which is responsible for these pollutants causing many serious medical issues to the
people of su
ounding areas as well as their own employees. Only few people are
complaining this situation as local industry keeps them out of poverty and they could not
move elsewhere as they could not afford it. The businesses were set up in the area
deliberately due to the fact that it is a developing and poor area. Businesses look at it from the
evenue and profitability point of view as it is always easier and cheaper to operate in a poor
area compared to a developed one. It is unfortunate that people from a developed or richer
countries are valued more compared to those living in underdeveloped countries. This is also
one reason why the companies from the developed countries turn to the Third World
countries and they do their businesses at the cost of the lives of people living there.
Ethical Implications
The businesses turn to the Third World countries and set up their ventures and pollute them
with toxic waste chemicals. The air, land, and water is so badly contaminated that people
living in those countries end up getting sick from drinking, eating, or
eathing the toxins.
The tragedy takes place when they hire natives to pollute their own countries. Most the
people are poor and they do not have much options left with them. They do whatever it takes
to feed themselves. The companies claim that they are helping people with jobs, but what’s
the use of that when they end up sick or dead inhaling the fumes of machines they use. The
companies definitely know that it is harmful for the employees and for those living there.
They can portray themselves as ignorant of these facts and try to reject the fact, but the reality
emains the same. It is quite unhealthy for these people walking outside, drinking, or eating,
Running head: POVERTY AND POLLUTION 3
then is it a good idea working around the chemicals? It makes a good business sense to the
companies and they claim that it is good for economy. But, they know for a fact that they are
polluting the environment and putting the lives of millions in danger. They may give their
justification of the benefits of economy but to make money putting lives at stake can never be
justified. These companies work for themselves and they make money no matter how they
come.
The businesses justify their wrongdoings saying that they are making these Third
World countries financially better and keeping the costs down. But businesses have their own
enefits operating in these countries. They find labor at low wages and resources at lower
costs, and there are less environmental controls enforceable in these countries. It makes a
very good business sense to these companies to pay lower wages to produce their products
and avoid paying any kinds of fines for polluting these countries compared to a rich country.
It helps them in keeping the price of the products down and have a competitive advantage
over their competitors and selling more.
The poor and rich countries have different environmental concerns.
“Environmentalists in the rich countries are wo
ied about preserving biodiversity, protecting
endangered species, preventing the climate change, and protecting ozone layer, whereas the
environmentalists in the poor countries are wo
ied about dirty water, dirty air, deforestation,
and soil erosion (Shaw, 2010). The people in the countries like America are too much
concerned about their health as well as the health of the future generations as well as
preserving environment and its inhabitants; while the people living in the places like Cubatão
are more...
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