opinionBan the bag ... or charge 5 cents for itBy Joshua KeatingSlatePosted: 02/27/2014 06:08:16 PM MST15 Comments | Updated: 6 months ago Anti-plastic-bag policies - either outright bans, fees or taxes - are in effect in nearly 100 U.S. cities. As The New York Times reports, California may soon become the first U.S. state to impose a blanket plastic bag ban. (In Colorado, Aspen in 2012 enacted a ban on plastic bags and a fee of 20 cents per paper bag, but there is a lawsuit pending as to its legality under TABOR. Denver debated enacting a 5 cent fee for paper and plastic grocery bags in 2013, but shelved the idea. Other cities in Colorado have either considered a fee or enacted one in the last several years.) A number of other countries have already taken more dramatic steps. Bangladesh became the first country to ban polythene bags in 2002. Bags clogging drainage pipes were found to have been one of the main reasons for the devastating 1988 and 1998 floods that left two-thirds of the country submerged. In 2008, China began requiring stores to charge for bags. Despite lax enforcement, the rule reduced plastic bag use by 49 percent. The most serious plastic crackdown may be in Rwanda, which became the first African country to take action on plastic bags when it imposed an outright ban in 2008. The laws are harsh: Walking down the street with a plastic bag can result in a $150 fine. Store owners stocking them can spend six to 12 months in prison. Putting aside human rights concerns about Paul Kagame's increasingly dictatorial government, such policies have earned the country - in particular the capital, Kigali - a reputation as one of Africa's cleanest. The law has also spurred the creation of one of the world's most prosaic black markets: the thriving underground trade in plastic bags, complete with crime syndicates delivering smuggled polythene to merchants. When you outlaw plastic bags, only outlaws will have plastic bags. Rwanda's draconian measures aside, I'm generally in favor of policies to reduce plastic bag usage. They're hazardous to manufacture, take hundreds of years to decompose, are a nuisance for farms and a blight on cities, and extremely harmful to animals when ingested. In tropical countries, they can be breeding grounds for malarial mosquitoes. Light bag taxes - like the 5 cent fee charged in Washington - seem to me like one of the more successful examples of the kind of "nudge" policies favored by economist Richard Thaler and legal scholar Cass Sunstein. The deterrent is less the money than the fact that you actually have to make a conscious decision to take a bag. If you find yourself without a bag and need an item that won't fit in your pockets and you don't feel like carrying, 5 cents isn't going to break the bank. But in many other cases - a single toothbrush from CVS, for instance - having to affirmatively ask for a bag will probably make you less likely to take one.