The math here is scary. If you spitball the regulatory cost of life for a Westerner, it’s around seven million dollars. To a certain extent, I’m pretty sure that that’s high because the costs of over-regulating are less salient to regulators than the costs of under-regulating, but taken at face value, that means that, apparently, thirty-five hundred poor African kids are equivalent to one American.
Hilariously, the IPCC got flak from anti-globalization activists for positing a fifteen-to-one ratio in the value of life between developed and developing nations.
The math here is scary. If you spitball the regulatory cost of life for a Westerner, it’s around seven million dollars. To a certain extent, I’m pretty sure that that’s high because the costs of over-regulating are less salient to regulators than the costs of under-regulating, but taken at face value, that means that, apparently, thirty-five hundred poor African kids are equivalent to one American.
Hilariously, the IPCC got flak from anti-globalization activists for positing a fifteen-to-one ratio in the value of life between developed and developing nations.