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| Consumers | 33% | 58 votes | Total: 177 votes | |
| OEMs | 67% | 119 votes |
Consumers
Created on: August 06, 2009
Ultimately the consumer is responsible for the cost of their own waste. Of course this is not only a matter of practicality since we all as consumers generate waste, but it is also a matter of economics. Any additional costs forced on manufacturers for the process of production and sale of their products will ultimately be filtered down to the consumer in the form of higher costs. The concept of imposing fees on manufactures is inefficient and ineffective for a number of reasons.
Each cost that is payable by the manufacture is sure to also have it's on taxes, fees, levies and government costs associated with it. This increases the costs to simply impose the penalty on a manufacture. This additional cost is then combined with the original fee on the manufacturer's side and becomes a detriment that must then be compensated for in order for the manufacture to recover a profit from their product. In the end the manufacturer is ultimately concerned with making a profit. They will not allow government regulation and fees result in a loss on a product. So the manufacturer in turn then passes this cost down to the consumer.
When the consumer makes their purchase the costs of the e-waste is now factored into the newly increased price of the product. This price is then taxed which results in more wasted money going to the government, which in turn requires more government overhead and expenditure. This is a cycle of productivity that has been part of our economy for decades now. It is a system that drives up the price on domestic goods and promotes the over inflation of the federal government, a necessary evil in order to manage all of the newly created streams of revenue as a result of the new regulation.
In the end the only real looser is the American consumer. We not only have to foot the bill for the e-waste fees as originally discussed, but also the taxes associated with these additional fees; sometimes double and triple taxes. We also must pay for the cost of the government overhead required to manage all of this new tax revenue. In the end we produce the same amount of waste, we still have landfills that are populated with dangerous heavy metals and the manufacturers still turn a profit while the consumers are left with a little less money in their wallet.
It would be much simpler for the government to simply charge the e-waste fee to the consumer in the first place. Since the consumer is going to pay this fee either way, either directly or indirectly doing so directly cuts out the entire over taxing and overhead by the government and will ultimately result in the consumer paying less for the fee than had it been indirectly charged to them through the trickle down manufacturing technique.
Learn more about this author, Joseph Whalen.
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OEMs
Created on: October 26, 2008 Last Updated: October 27, 2008
Taking a walk in the woods, enjoying all that nature has to offer and what do you see? A TV set dumped - the owner now long-gone, probably enjoying their brand new LCD HD experience while the now-forgotten CRT tube dies a slow death abandoned.
It may be a touch over-dramatising the reality but some people still think it's acceptable to dump their defunct technology anywhere they please - rather than disposing of it responsibly by way of recycling. Since the WEEE act (Waste electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive) was written, in the EU (European Union) all electrical items manufactured and sold after January 2007 must be recycled or disposed separately from normal household waste.
In theory, there is nothing wrong in encouraging everyone to recycle outdated items, in the UK alone, according to www.recycle-more.co. uk 1.2 million tonnes of electrical waste is dumped every year. Initiatives to re-use as much as we can are well-meaning but not everyone can easily access these facilities. Not many people in any community will have the slightest idea where their local electrical waste site is - it may be provided but little publicity about it will have seeped into the local consciousness.
You can almost see why people dump things illegally - having to find the money, transport and labour to get rid of unwanted products - it's a last resort when recycling or proper dumping sites are "hidden" in communities.
The major consumer manufacturers are quick enough to build upgrade-upon-upgrade on their products, have advertising budgets that could run a small country for decades - when it comes to disposing of them though they are sorely lacking. At no point in the advertising, purchasing or life of the product are you encouraged by them personally on how to throw it away properly. Having small-print about the WEEE directive on the back of product manuals isn't sufficient - it might be law but still washes their own hands of any responsibility in the matter.
It shouldn't be all on the consumer to be rid of these items (at their own expense) - the manufacturers are using whatever means and resources to make these products - they should also have a recycling process installed to enable their man-made junk to be returned to them for proper disposal.
The whole idea of recycling will not impact the planet if big business isn't willing to take part - they need to be forced into action now. All of us would like recycling to be a natural aspect of our everyday lives, but until it becomes something we all need to do then those TVs will keep appearing in the woods, what a waste!
Learn more about this author, Wayne Reeves.
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