Back to Search Start Over

Environment, health, and sustainable development: the role of economic instruments and policies

Authors :
Warford, J.J.
Source :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization. May-June, 1995, Vol. v73 Issue n3, p387, 9 p.
Publication Year :
1995

Abstract

Recent years have seen considerable progress in integrating environmental concerns into the mainstream of development policy and planning. Economic instruments designed explicitly for environmental purposes may help to achieve cost-effective solutions, and generate public revenues. Macroeconomic and sectoral policies may impact heavily upon the environment, and there is much scope for policy reforms that are justified in both economic and environmental terms. Progress in this area has been much more rapid than in the case of health objectives, even though the rationale for environmental improvement is often ultimately related to human health and well-being. It is proposed that lessons from recent experience in the use of economic instruments and policies to achieve environmental objectives are highly relevant for the health sector, which should seek and encourage support for measures that require consumers and producers of environmentally degrading products to pay for the economic and social costs of the damage resulting from their use. Policy reform at the macroeconomic or sectoral level may yield cost-effective solutions to some health problems, and may even bring about improvements in health status that involve no net cost at all. The countrywide impact of such policies indicate that health agencies, including WHO, should develop the capacity to understand how economic policies and the adjustment process impact upon human health, not only directly through the effect on incomes, but also indirectly, via changes in the natural environment. Ability to conduct rigorous health impact assessment of economic policy reform, which requires a multidisciplinary effort, is a necessary condition if health ministries are to maximize their effectiveness in influencing overall government economic policy.<br />Economic instruments for environmental management Recent developments in the application of environmental economics are relevant to the health sector, especially considering the structural adjustment processes that are under way in [...]

Subjects

Subjects :
Environmental health -- Planning

Details

ISSN :
00429686
Volume :
v73
Issue :
n3
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.17376572