Ban Plastic Bags, Ban Jobs?

It’s become fashionable in urban locales to ban the humble plastic bag. Los Angeles became the largest US city to enact such a ban, back in May of this year. Cities say they’re banning the bags to fight pollution or for other environmental reasons. But as we’ve blogged here before, plastic bags are more sanitary than the reusable bags that the forces of ban prefer (Ban the Bag, Get the Runs), and we warned that banning plastic bags could lead to job losses (‘Don’t Kill Our Jobs with a Plastic Bag Ban’).

Advertisement

LA didn’t listen, and now a study has come out linking job losses in the area directly to the ban on plastic bags.

A report from the National Center for Policy Analysis says a study done in communities that have banned the use of plastic shopping bags results in shoppers going to areas that do not have such a ban — affecting revenues and employment.

The effect is to reduce the amount spent in the ban area, while increasing sales and employment in stores where the use of plastic bags is permitted.

NCPA says it surveyed store managers in Los Angeles County, which has had a ban since July 2011, and the results show an impact on store revenues and levels of employment.

According to the NCPA study , there was a 10 percent reduction over the one-year periods studied, both before and after the ban on plastic bags. In comparison, 60 percent of the areas without the ban showed a 9 percent average increase in sales.

Ban bans also increase costs to cities governments, such as in the city of Austin, TX.

City officials plan to conduct a campaign to educate residents — expected to cost between $1.5 million to $2 million — about the need to change over to cloth or reusable bags of another material.

“I’m looking at 50 percent of that cost being in distributing reusable bags in the city for socioeconomic parts around the city. So we’re talking about a media campaign, a bag distribution, and a neighborhood outreach campaign,” Bob Gedert, director of the city’s trash and recycling department, said in March.

Advertisement

But it’s all good, right, we’re awash in money and we’re creating more jobs than we know what to do with. Right?

Not so much.

The NCPA study of Los Angeles shows that every single store within the bag ban area “was forced to terminate some of its staff, [but] not a single store outside the ban area dismissed any staff.”

The study also says the stores inside the ban area tried to assist customers by buying reusable bags, and that also had a negative effect.

“Many stores also began purchasing reusable bags. While 43 percent of stores in the ban area had not purchased reusable bags before, every store purchased these bags after the ban. And nearly half of these stores (48 percent), lost money on reusable bags,” according to the study’s Executive Summary.

To top all of that off, the environmental benefits of banning plastic bags come with negative side effects.

The study found that plastic bags are actually better for the environment than those commonly believed to be better: paper bags.

“For an equivalent amount of groceries, production of paper bags requires three times as much total energy and recovers only 1 percent of that energy through combustion. Paper bags also produce substantially more landfill waste. For an equivalent amount of groceries, single-use plastic bags produce 15.5 pounds of waste while paper bags produce nearly 75 pounds of waste,” according to the study.

Decomposition of paper bags also produces more greenhouse gases, the researchers found, with production of plastic bags using 71 less energy compared to energy needs in production of paper bags.

Reusable bags don’t fare much better when it comes to pollution of the environment, say the researchers.

“Reusable bags may be the worst of all. Such bags need to be used 104 times to be less polluting than plastic bags. However, such bags are used only 52 times on average.”

Advertisement

Many plastic bags are manufactured in the US, so each ban threatens some of the 30,000 American jobs in that industry.

So why did they ban plastic bags again? Right — to make themselves feel better, and because they could.

Recommended

Trending on PJ Media Videos

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Advertisement
Advertisement