Showing posts with label Ecological Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecological Economics. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2021

A Most Interesting Question

Title of a journal article in Ecological Economics, Volume 185, to be published in July, 2021:
"Beyond ecosystem services and nature's contributions: Is it time to leave utilitarian environmentalism behind?".

From the "Highlights" of the article (preceding the Abstract)---
"We plead for a paradigm shift, away from utilitarian, anthropocentric and dualistic conceptions of human-nature relations."

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800921000963

As Homo sapiens attempts to move toward sustainability and all things "Green", it seems to me that we're still missing an important underpinning to the success of those efforts.  It's known as ecocentrism.

In the dozens of articles on the circular economy, the doughnut/donut economy, etc. which I've read, the ideology of anthropocentrism appears to prevail.  Is that, as Lynn White proposed decades ago, due to the Judeo-Christian worldview of the Nature-Human relationship (which sees humanity both superior to and separate from Nature)?  Perhaps, but I really don't know.

In any case and in general, humans do seem to be filled with hubris... especially regarding nonhuman life.  That's a problem when we profess to be "going Green".  In my view, there will be no successful sustainability without the adoption of ecoethics on a massive scale.  Ecoethics will not be the prevailing philosophical standard without a paradigm shift in our view of the natural world.  In the meantime, our efforts toward sustainability - though laudable and a good first step - still amount to tinkering around the edges of the socio-eco-econ-ethical Crisis.

Nonhuman life has intrinsic value, not just utilitarian value.  The Earth is not here for us to "subdue" (from the Book of Genesis in the Bible).  The spark of life in all beings is the spirit of Universal Consciousness.  

As Barry Commoner stated in 1971 (in his book, The Closing Circle):  "Everything is connected to everything else".  We humans are not separate from Nature; we are Nature.  We don't "come into the world" when we're born.  We come from it.  All beings are Universal Consciousness expressing Itself.

Without the above worldview, I don't see how we can live in harmony with Nature, or have any significant degree of sustainability.

Not only my opinion.  Be Well 


Saturday, April 17, 2021

The real reason why we're still in Afghanistan...

and never will leave completely unless we undergo a paradigm shift in economics.

https://campbellmgold.co.uk/archive_blowing_in_the_wind/afghanistan_mineral_riches.pdf  [Article by James Risen.]

Almost fifteen years ago, the USGS and the Pentagon discovered the probability is extremely high that Afghanistan is awash in mineral riches totaling about one trillion dollars.  Not only common minerals such as iron and copper are buried there, but those crucial to modern day industry (e.g., lithium) as well.

The world is at a point where mineral resources - especially rare earth minerals - are more and more difficult to access.  Afghanistan has never been mined to any significant degree.  Done in 2007, the USGS used highly sophisticated aerial survey equipment in a study which shows the country is ripe for extremely productive mining.

World leaders who are not pursuing sustainability are prone to believe that when it comes to critical natural resources, it's a "dog-eat-dog" world.  Sometimes such thinking results in long-term planning involving resource wars, or financial wars, or best case - diplomacy.  For decades, we've had all the above on planet Earth.

One way or another, the richer countries are going to get access to needed natural resources.  That's especially true when the country is on an unsustainable path, which currently is the case in the USA and many other well-off nations.

Sustainability is one of the keys to a peaceful future.  Ecological economics is the best path forward.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well


Wednesday, November 11, 2020

All Politicians Should Pay Attention to This




 https://www.uvm.edu/gund/news/can-regenerative-agriculture-save-american-farms

I've watched the number of family farms in the USA shrink for over sixty years.  Their replacement, industrial agriculture, is harming soil, water, air, plants, animals, and the ecosphere in general.  This has to stop if we are to thrive as ethical, sensible, and practical beings.

We humans tend to take air, water, and food for granted.  Fortunately, over the last half century or so, we've started to realize that's a mistake.  We're finally beginning to edge toward some version of ecological economics and sustainability.  Let's hope that continues.

At the link above is a brief description of a policy which should be supported and promoted by politicians everywhere.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Breaking Monopolies, Reducing Rentier Power re Rent Extraction, and the Connections to Resource Use & "Growth"

 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800919304203

    Title - "The Threat of Rent Extraction in a Resource-constrained Future"
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There are many different types of "rents".  Don't think only in terms of living space rent.  For example, there's the renting of your labor.  There's the renting of land for purposes other than residential housing, and there are a number of other types.

The author of the above journal article proposes that private rent extraction is "a barrier to the goal of transforming economic institutions so that society can flourish within planetary boundaries [limitations]".  She maintains that concentrations of private rentier power create an imperative for unlimited growth.

For the most part, I believe that's correct.  I also believe such thoughts would be rejected outright by many people here in the USA, but not as much in Europe and elsewhere.  Why?  People here rightly would view it as democratic socialism, and they seem to have a completely black/white view of socialism v. capitalism.  To them, any form of socialism is evil (so to speak).  They tend to ignore the fact that public roads, public water systems, public parks, the VA Health Care system, USPS, public art museums, and a plethora of other public institutions are all examples of democratic socialism in action.  In short, we have a mixed economy, as do most countries of the world.

Via Edward Bernays style molding of the public mind, private and public Oligarchs in the USA have convinced too many people that Monopoly-Casino-Crony Capitalism is the same as the capitalism of Adam Smith, their economic hero.  It's not even close.  Except in the realm of very small business, Smith's capitalism no longer exists.  He did not favor monopolies, mega biz, or any kind of Oligarchy.  Rather than praising so-called "Masters of the Universe", he viewed them unfavorably.  Today's Oligarchs claim the opposite; they're wrong.

People in the EU (& Norway and Iceland, which are not formally in the EU), tend to be much more open-minded regarding economic/political ideology.  [Example: in Europe there's a political/economic philosophy known as Libertarian Socialism.  In the USA, that would be considered an oxymoron.]  Even though all those countries have enclaves of narrow-mindedness in that regard, overall they're much more flexible than the USA.  Point being:  transforming society from neoliberalism to some form of ecological economics is a tough row to hoe, but especially so in the USA.
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The article cited above deserves sincere consideration in the effort to create a world more equitable, more ecological, and more in line with the needs of all people, instead of only the privileged few.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Monday, October 19, 2020

Various Considerations in Ecological Economics and Sustainability

 1.  Increased efficiency and curtailing the expansion of material stocks in the UK:
        https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921344920302780#bib0035

    Title - "Stock-flow relations in the socio-economic metabolism of the United Kingdom 1800–2017".
Socio-economic metabolism refers to a society's use of biophysical resources (i.e., energy and materials), a key factor in the sustainability arena.
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2.  https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214629615300827

    Title - "How long will it take? Conceptualizing the temporal dynamics of energy transitions".
When I last taught Ecology (at the college level, in the 1990's), the conventional wisdom was:  it takes about forty years for a society to change from one primary energy source to another.  That is being re-evaluated.
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3.  The term, "economic growth", sounds really great, but is it?  When thinking about the topic, too many people have faulty assumptions and tend to ignore two of the main effects of econ growth:  income inequality, and gross pollution of our biosphere.
    
    https://steadystate.org/who-does-economic-growth-serve/

    The author, Brian F. Snyder, is an assistant professor of environmental science at Louisiana State University.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Sunday, September 27, 2020

Complete Bioeconomics & Degrowth Look Like This

 Most of the Bioeconomics of today is not that of Georgescu-Roegen, the founder of the concept.  Why?  Because the "updated", new century versions are incomplete, and they seem to eschew "degrowth".  There's much more to bioeconomics than just bioenergy, which seems to be the main (or only) focus today.  Plus, the original bioeconomics promoted the idea of degrowth.

In the article below, the ecological and political economist, Giorgos Kallis (one of today's leading champions of degrowth), presents specific policies which would make possible a thriving society without economic growth.

https://www.greeneuropeanjournal.eu/can-we-prosper-without-growth-10-policy-proposals/

Are some of these policies "radical"?  Frankly, yes; but that's the approach needed if we are to get through the ongoing Social-Ecological Crisis now upon us.  If we are to survive and thrive, we must discard the Edward Bernays style propaganda to which we've been subjected for decades.  The neoclassical/neoliberal economists have bamboozled us.

Unlimited Growth + Overconsumption + Inequality + Materialism = a rat race which is destroying not only our habitat, but us as well.  A paradigm shift in Ethics is in order.  Common sense and empirical evidence scream for it.  The main obstacle appears to be the sacrosanct vision of constant, perpetual Growth.

Tick-tock.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well


Friday, August 21, 2020

The Rubbish of Mainstream Economics: Its Assertions, Most Products, & Its Wastes

Preface

As a species, we're at an important crossroad.  Shall we continue on the path of unlimited growth and overconsumption, or choose a different path?  In other words, shall we continue producing an ever-increasing mountain of rubbish (both products & wastes), or choose another route?

For decades, and continuing presently, we've chosen a path based on myths and falsehoods.  That path has brought about a multi-faceted disaster which is unfolding before our eyes.  We've yet to encounter the worst of it, thus some people continue to believe everything will be okay.  It's all being handled.
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The Primary Myths of Mainstream Economics (in no particular order)

1.  This is the Age of Information and Services.  Don't worry about developed countries transferring manufacturing elsewhere.  We'll import goods.  Plus, soon we'll decouple economics from natural resources and ecological impacts.
https://theconversation.com/the-decoupling-delusion-rethinking-growth-and-sustainability-71996

Most of number 1. above is rubbish.  For example, the number one service industry is Transportation.  What's being transported?  Mostly - material goods (and people).  Unfortunately, a great deal of those goods are junk, inferior goods from countries which have super-low wages and few environmental laws.  Low-priced in the short-run, but costly in the long-run.  They have to be replaced about every year.  Lots of them are on Amazon, and in Walmart.  The rest of the service industry uses "goods" galore.  Point being:  an economy needs manufacturing, especially if a Middle Class is to survive.

Then there's "Information".  Mainstreamers often claim an economy can be grown with the buying and selling of that.  The trouble is:  information usually is connected directly to manufacturing or agricultural GOODS.  Two exceptions to that:  info in the Financial Sector, and Advertising.  The Financial Sector extracts money from the economy; it doesn't add to it.  [This despite the fact that its income is counted as adding to the GDP.]  Advertising (mostly outlandish) adds to the cost of goods or services.  So, neither one is very good for the economy.  Of course, that's arguable.

2.  Perpetual, unlimited growth will lift people out of poverty.  "A rising tide lifts all boats".  That's why Business (especially Mega Business) should have tax breaks, subsidies, bailouts, loopholes, etc.

The main problems with those assertions are:
a)  the opportunity playing field is not level;
b)  there is almost zero "trickle down" nowadays; and,
c)  too many CEOs focus only on quarterly profits and increasing the stock value. 
That all means low wages, few benefits, and no job security.  CEOs and other top execs get their "golden parachute" even if they run the company into the ground.
More rubbish.
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Industrial and Commercial Wastes

The air, bodies of water, and land are all being used as "waste sinks".  Not much, but some of those wastes are recycled naturally and/or artificially.  Back when I was a teenager (in the 1950's), Earth's human population was 2.5 billion; it's now close to 8 billion.  As population has increased, so has the amount of waste.  Today, despite recycling efforts, and due to the growth of the petrochemical industry, both the amount of waste and its toxicity have exceeded Earth's waste 
assimilating and/or neutralizing capabilities.  Plus, recycling of the most ubiquitous solid waste - plastic - has dropped way off.  Let's not even mention the ongoing problems with nuclear waste... too depressing.

For several years as a HazMat Specialist with Sacramento County, I inspected businesses of all sizes for regulatory compliance regarding hazardous wastes and hazardous products.  [I left that job in 2004.]  Also included in my inspections were governmental facilities such as military bases.  One of those was a SuperFund Cleanup Site.  [By the way, Trump has stopped the addition of new sites to the aggregate list of sites.]  As of June 2019, there are 1,344 SuperFund Sites scattered all across the USA... in every one of our 50 States.  Each one is so badly polluted that it will take years to do the cleanup.  The biggest problem is pollution of groundwater (water held underground).  Frankly, I doubt that all such sites ever will be back to normal.  It's a safe bet there are thousands more sites that didn't make the SuperFund category listing.  Finally, there were 48 more SuperFund Sites proposed for addition to the list in 2019.  They didn't make it because of our "genius" President stopping the entire procedure.

Point being:  we have a massive problem relative to pollution of the air, water, and land.  Most people are cognizant of this.  Those who believe we can decouple GROWTH from natural resources and negative environmental impact via substitutions and human ingenuity are, in my opinion, peddling snake oil... both to themselves and the to rest of us.
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Conclusion

Continuing on with unlimited growth and overconsumption, while ignoring Earth's biophysical constraints, makes no sense.  That's brought us to where we are today... even after 50 years of the "Environmental Movement"!  We don't need more junk and waste in our lives.  What does make sense is degrowth and transitioning to a Steady State Economy, essentially, to Ecological Economics.  If organized human existence is to survive and thrive, that's the path we should take.  And as I've said before, that will require a paradigm shift in ethics.

See https://mahb.stanford.edu/
Also https://steadystate.org/
Also http://www.ussee.org/our-blog/category/education-publications/
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Natural Capital Valuation and the Problem of "de dicto" OR "de re"

Preface

One part of designing an economic system which is ecologically sensible and sustainable is the approach of assigning monetary values to "natural capital".  Efforts are underway in various places around the world to do that.  I believe those efforts are commendable and necessary, but there might be a problem that should be kept in mind.
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Will the Valuation be "de dicto" or "de re"?

http://www.isecoeco.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/ONeill-what_is_lost_through_no_net_loss.pdf

To value an object merely as a vehicle for "services" is to value it de dicto.  The object is substitutable.  To value it for its specific, intrinsic characteristics, for its inherent, essential nature is to value the object de re.  It is not substitutable.

Valuing some objects de dicto is entirely appropriate.  A case in point would be tools.  To do so with other objects, such as living, sentient beings, is ethically questionable.  In some cases, even the nonliving portion of a landscape may not be substitutable in terms of the well-being of various people.

One proposal in the natural capital valuation approach is to implement offsetting markets.  If, for example, there's a loss of an ecosystem or a portion thereof in one area, then in another area one (of equal value) would be restored, or created, or preserved.  Supposedly, there would be no net loss.  But, what if the lost item is valued "de re" by the people in the area or region?  Then there is a net loss, and the well-being of some people is reduced.

In the article at the link above, Professor John O'Neill gives a critique of the whole idea of natural capital valuation (including offsetting markets).  The article at the link below is a slightly different version of the one above.  He makes some very important points which need to be given serious consideration.

https://www.cusp.ac.uk/themes/m/m1-6/#1475182667098-0328ae0f-4bcbf2c7-159ee609-9652

I well remember when offsetting markets were created for air pollution.  "Unused" carbon emissions could be sold to companies above their limits in order for them to keep polluting the atmosphere (for some limited time).  No net gain in air pollution.  Or, in exchange for being above their limits re emissions, polluters could buy tracts of forests and preserve them in order to reduce CO2 in the air.  Only the good side of that scenario was promoted in the media; it still is today.  So, the question is:  how well has "cap and trade" (carbon offsetting) worked out for our atmosphere?  In my view, not very well at all.

I'm not saying that natural capital offsetting markets are strictly comparable to carbon offsetting.  Nevertheless, the latter is a cautionary tale.
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Conclusion

While I believe that natural capital valuation is a worthwhile endeavor, policy makers must be extremely careful as to how they use it.  Markets rarely have been kind to nonhuman life.  Nor have they been kind at times to the abiotic portion of the ecosphere.  In particular, it's questionable whether or not offsetting markets could, or should, be utilized in all cases of natural capital.  See the links above for a full discussion.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Thursday, July 30, 2020

The Problem, and How to Start to Solve It

The Ehrlichs have been working in the ecological arena for decades.  I first read some of their written work in about 1970.  Ever since then, I've greatly respected their scientific acuity and promotion of caring stewardship regarding Earth.

Here's a recent, short essay of theirs---

https://mahb.stanford.edu/blog/the-fallacy-of-back-to-normal-thinking-anne-and-paul-ehrlich/

If we are to continue the responsible, organized existence of human beings on Spaceship Earth, then the Powers-That-Be in developed democratic countries (in particular) need to heed the call expressed in the piece above.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Free Book - "Beyond Growth" by Herman Daly

Below is a link to the online version of Beyond Growth - The Economics of Sustainable Development, by the renowned ecological economist, Herman Daly.

Some of the Figures/illustrations found in the regular book are not in this online text.
http://feineigle.com/static/books/2014/beyond_growth/Beyond%20Growth_The%20Economics%20of%20Sustainable%20Development-Herman%20E.%20Daly-(1997).pdf
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Be Well

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Challenges Faced by Ecological Economics

Preface

The author of the article linked to farther down the page is Professor Brian Czech.  Here's a bit about him---
https://steadystate.org/brian-czech/
Not long ago, I became a member of his outfit (of which he's the founding president), CASSE.  Here's their Mission statement + their Strategy---
https://steadystate.org/meet/mission/
Join their group and you'll be sent a dynamite, slim volume of essays titled, Best of The Daly News, "from the leading blog in Steady State Economics", and referring to Herman Daly.  Read that, and you'll be somewhat of an expert on Steady State Economics.  [NOTE:  I'm not being paid to promote CASSE.]
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Ecological Economics and its Challenges

The piece at the link below is an outstanding essay by Professor Czech.  It comprehensively describes the history, principles of, and challenges for the academic discipline of ecological economics (eco-econ).

https://steadystate.org/wp-content/uploads/Czech_Ecological_Economics.pdf

If you don't have time now for the entire article, at least read all of Section 5., "Future Directions and Challenges for Ecological Economics" and all of Section 6., "Conclusion".  Catch the rest later.  You will then have the most concise and cogent understanding of eco-econ I've ever seen.

Some of the topics addressed in the above piece include:
1.  a key component of eco-econ, "sustainable scale", which means the size of the economy in relation to the biophysical constraints of its sustaining ecosystem;
2.  the influences of classical, neoclassical, and ecological economists on the discipline of macroeconomics;
3.  ends, means, and philosophy in economics;
4.  allocation of resources;
5.  GDP and sustainability;
6.  distribution of wealth;
7.  ecological implications of the volume and flow of money;
8.  de-growth;
9.  natural capital valuation in relation to macroeconomics; and more.
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Conclusion

If you really want to be part of the ecological movement, it's necessary to become educated far beyond catch-phrases and sound-bites.  On this page alone, you have links to sources which will help advance your eco-socio-education by leaps and bounds.  Take advantage.  The macro-ecosystem known as Mother Earth needs all the help it can get.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well, and Happy Trails

Sunday, July 26, 2020

The Bioeconomics of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen

Preface

Professor Georgescu-Roegen, a Romanian-American masterful mathematician and economist, laid the groundwork (with his Bioeconomics) for the discipline of Ecological Economics (Eco-Econ).  Herman Daly, generally acknowledged as the "Father of Eco-Econ", was Georgescu-Roegen's student back in the day.

The article at the link below relates in great detail a small part of the Bioeconomics founder's life.  His most famous publication was the book, The Entropy Law and the Economic Process (1971).  It's a discussion of a key principle in Eco-Econ.
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Why Study History?

In this particular case, there are at least two reasons:
1)  It's a fairly fascinating story.
2)  It's a great example of how and why a brilliant idea/concept can get smothered, ignored, delayed, and essentially squashed by the Establishment in any field of endeavor.  In regard to the application of entropy to economics, that's still ongoing to some degree by "mainstream" (neoliberal) economists.
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Conclusion

In trying to grasp the essence of any discipline, it's important to delve into its history.  I imagine some/many younger people who find Eco-Econ extremely appealing often wonder why it's not already implemented.  The article at the link below will give anyone great insight into a few possible/likely reasons for that.  It should encourage them to "hang in there".

https://www.degrowth.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Levallois_degrowth-an-historical-nite.pdf
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Overview: The History & Future of Entropy's Influence on Economics

Preface

Admittedly, this topic is a bit esoteric.  Nevertheless, and even though I'm not any kind of mathematician, I believe there's a lot of insight to be gained from the journal article (published in April, 2020) at the link below.  The researcher, Jakimowicz, presents an analysis of entropy and the largely theoretical or nascent disciplines of quantum economics, complexity economics, econophysics, and the much more developed ecological economics.  He covers the role of the brilliant Romanian-American economist and science philosopher, Nicolas Georgescu-Roegen, in opening the door to the ongoing development (arguably, it's now pretty much complete) of ecological economics.  [In my next post, I'll link to a journal essay which discusses that.  It's quite an interesting story, and one which I believe demonstrates the arrogance of the "Church of Perpetual Growth & Overconsumption", aka, neoclassical/neoliberal economics.]
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Navigating the Article

If, like me, you're not a mathematician, then you can skim over the somewhat complex math formulas in the piece below.  Like Georgescu-Roegen, I've never believed that it's wise of economists to attempt to represent human behavior with math formulas anyway... and economics is very much about human behavior, not just goods and services.

To get a fairly solid understanding of the article, I recommend reading the Abstract, and then sections 1, 3, 6, and 12.  That should give you valuable insights into the connection of the Law of Entropy to ecological economics, and really, to all economics.

Though the piece is for those with advanced backgrounds, I believe anyone with only a bit of science education plus at least average intelligence can grasp the nuts & bolts of it.
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Conclusion

The journal article at the link below provides more proof that neoliberal economics--- which is destroying our life support systems--- is on the ropes, so to speak.  The King is vulnerable to being dethroned.  😄  It's time for people to step up, to demand of politicians (probably 90% of whom are neoliberals) a major change.  Without pressure, those politicians will not abandon their main constituency--- the Super-Rich.

https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/22/4/452/htm
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Not only my opinion.  Happy Trails, and Stay Well

Sunday, July 5, 2020

"Economics for a Full World", & a Sustainable World

Preface

This isn't only about economics.  It's also about ethics, respect for and appreciation of the biosphere/ecosphere, respect for all sentient beings, and a path to a sustainable, mostly peaceful world.

At the links below, Professors Herman Daly and William Rees give masterful, concise explanations of ecological economics.  The Daly essay is a longer, illustrated read, but both require your full attention in order to comprehend them.  The Rees piece (the link was posted previously on this blog) includes a brilliant comparison to neoliberal/mainstream economics (aka, neoclassical economics).

Both essays do a great job of weaving the larger ethical, political, and ecological contexts into the discussions.
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https://greattransition.org/publication/economics-for-a-full-world

https://greattransition.org/publication/economics-vs-the-economy
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Conclusion

For anyone desiring to understand the best solution to a large part of our ongoing problems on Earth, the essays above are a must-read.  Study them as if our lives depended on it... because they do.  Then, do whatever you can to support and promote these concepts.  Thanks, and my grandkids thank you as well.  😊
p.s.  I recommend reading the Rees piece first - Economics vs. the Economy.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Friday, July 3, 2020

An Alternative to the Obsession With GDP

Preface

Mainstream economics is obsessed with gross domestic product (GDP) growth.  Those who measure GDP growth are convinced that any amount of it is a good sign for the economy, and that's how it's presented to the public.  Furthermore, any economy is considered to be separate from Nature (or worse, Nature is only a small part of the economy); also, sustainability of natural resources is rarely ever considered.  The only resources taken into account during the bulk of economic planning are artificial--- railways, trucks, factories, ships, etc.--- or are humans (labor).  A bit of consideration is given to natural resource availability, but usually not in any holistic way.  To be more concise, mainstream economists value Nature only for what can be extracted from it, and for the amount of wastes that can be dumped back into it.

Note---  these topics are not "flashy", but understanding them is crucial to the continued organized existence of human beings.  The path we're still on is leading to species suicide.  That's not hyperbole.
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The Flaws in Mainstream Economic Thinking

1.  Herman Daly and other Steady-State economists astutely have pointed out the probability of growth beyond an optimal scale that is uneconomic.  In other words, growth in which the costs outweigh the benefits.  Mainstream economists don't agree.  That's because they don't know the overall practical value of Nature to economics and human well-being.  Nor do they appear to understand the true costs of ecosystem damage inflicted by human mainstream economic activity.  To them, ecosystems merely are a tiny part of the economy.  That's especially true now that financialization has become a larger part of economies.  So, I imagine this quip from a mainstreamer:  "We don't need Nature.  To increase GDP, all we have to do is shuffle more papers (so to speak).".

2.  The practical value of natural capital and ecosystem services is often somewhat invisible to, and thus vastly underestimated or ignored by, mainstream economists.  Here's a short introduction to the topic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMIUglBligI .
Here's another, with E.O. Wilson:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=duOzXGTuUrA .

3.  Mainstream economists fail to recognize that GDP as a measurement of  economic health (and human well-being) is incomplete in the long run, and thus misleading.

Gross Ecosystem Product (GEP) Approach

From the Natural Capital Project at Stanford U.---
https://naturalcapitalproject.stanford.edu/news/accounting-nature-economies
For those of you who may be at a more advanced level regarding this subject, here's the link to the full study--- (which also is embedded at the link above as "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences").
https://www.pnas.org/content/117/25/14593 .
This ecological approach, developed by the Natural Capital Project, already is being tested in China.  The EU has something similar:  Mapping and Assessment of Ecosystems and their Services (MAES).
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Conclusion

The philosophy and policies of neoliberalism/mainstream economics have brought us to where we are today:  environmental degradation; little to no concern for the importance of ecosystem services; little concern for industrial waste disposal (especially if it's into the atmosphere); the unsustainable use of natural capital; and a false belief in unlimited growth, overconsumption, GDP as a complete measure of economic health, and corporatism.  If all that isn't bad enough, we're on the brink of the largest, most severe ecodisaster in human history.  Meanwhile, the Super-Rich are laughing all the way to the bank, most politicians are doing a lot of talking and not much else, and the corporatist propagandists are running amok.

A ray of hope---
A shift to ecological economics, as well as the continued development of the GEP approach to economic measurement, and the adoption of ecoethics is the best path forward... and it's all possible.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Unlimited Growth, Overconsumption, Equity, and Ecological Economics

Preface

It should be axiomatic that the concept of perpetual, unlimited economic growth and consumption on a finite planet is delusional thinking.  Instead, that concept appears to be the unquestionable mantra of mainstream/neoliberal economics around the world.  I believe it came to be that way because it started when our world was relatively empty of humans, and relatively full of natural resources.

Even later, when I was a freshman at Colorado State U. (1961), the human population was only three billion.  Perceptions of future, unlimited possibilities were quite different then.  Even though it was fairly pervasive, environmental degradation largely was unrecognized by most people.  Natural resources seemed to be super abundant, and in a perpetually unlimited supply.  Overall, the biophysical world appeared to be almost limitless.  The idol of unlimited economic expansion was "worshipped" around the world.

In 1968, a book by Paul R. Ehrlich & his wife, Anne, The Population Bomb, was published.  It was a best-seller, and made the points that this planet is finite, the natural environment will be degraded even more significantly, and the availability of resources will not keep pace with overpopulation.  The book was attacked rather viciously by believers in unlimited growth.

In 1972, after a two-year study by M.I.T. researchers (utilizing a large, mainframe computer), the results were published in a book titled, The Limits of Growth.  Like the Ehrlichs' book, it was a best-seller.  And it was attacked even more fiercely.  This is a fascinating story, and the author, Christopher Ketcham, is one helluva writer.  See the details here---
https://psmag.com/magazine/fallacy-of-endless-growth .
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The Ignorance & Neglect by Economists of Biophysical Constraints

It appears to me that most mainstream economists have little to no higher education in the natural sciences.  In the essay at the link above, Ketcham quotes a number of them, as follows.
1. Oxford U. economist, W. Beckerman:  "[There's] no reason to suppose that economic growth cannot continue for another 2,500 years.".
2.  Harvard economist, C. Kaysen:  "[Some studies show] the Earth's available matter and energy could support a population of 3.5 trillion...".
3.  J. Simon (deceased), University of Illinois economist, stated in 1992:  "We now have... the technology to feed, clothe, and supply energy to an ever-growing population for the next 7 billion years.".
Those beliefs are, of course, sheer nonsense.  I can surmise only that they are due to an almost total ignorance of natural science.

In contrast, ecological economics fully recognizes biophysical constraints, and the negative impacts on our natural life support systems of pursuing unlimited growth.  From An Introduction to Ecological Economics (1997), by Robert Costanza, Herman Daly, et.al.:  "The basic problems...include:  ...highly entropy-increasing technologies that deplete the earth of its resources and whose unassimilated wastes poison the air, water, and land... ".

Unlimited Growth and Overconsumption

I recently watched a 2011 British documentary, "Consumed - inside the belly of the beast".  It effectively illustrated humanity's cultural evolution to the stage at which we find ourselves now:  lost in materialism, consumerism, short-term shallow thinking, the pursuit of unnecessary prestige, and trying our best to ignore the destruction of the ecosphere.  It also put forth the proposition that this stage is a temporary glitch in the development of the species, Homo sapiens.  The makers of the film see a future shift to sustainability and ecoethics.  Let's all hope that's the case for our species.

The film detailed how, over decades, we've been molded by advertising and propaganda to believe that consumer goods can bring us meaning, prestige, contentment, fulfillment, and the big kahuna, happiness.  The key is to buy more and more goods.  Over the years, as we've come to realize ultimately none of that is true, our discontent, anxiety, and emptiness all have increased.  During the same time, we've been trained (in a sense) to seek instant gratification, all the latest tech gizmos (to be replaced every year or two), and to desire having "the latest thing".  Now, we're at the point of a line from an old Rolling Stones' song:  "I can't get no satisfaction.".  On top of all that, too many people seem to believe that Nature is nice, but not especially important... and not really necessary.

In recent years, both mainstream economists and corporate America have used all the above to double-down on their promotion of perpetual, unlimited growth.  Any problems regarding natural resource depletion or ecosphere damage, they say, can be handled by new technology and/or the substitution of one resource for another.  Some mega corporations even have advertised their new "green" initiatives concerning corporate operations.  There's one big problem with all these solutions:  they are all within the framework of continuing unlimited economic growth and consumption... on a finite planet.

Ever-increasing economic growth means ever-increasing throughput. "Throughput" is the total flow of resources from the Earth ecosystem to the economic subsystem... and then back to the ecosystem as waste.  One doesn't have to be a genius to understand that more & more & more of such a system is unsustainable.  It's folly to believe that undiscovered, new technology and/or substitutable resources will prevent the collapse of our natural life support system.  That collapse already has started.  Much more than we've been trying to, we need to mitigate it NOW.  We must undergo a major shift in ethical and cultural values.  The old paradigm is killing us... literally... and both directly & indirectly.  It's time to implement steady-state, ecological economics.

Equity

It's all well and good to say, in the developed world countries we have a democratic system which ensures everyone's chance to pursue happiness and fulfillment; however, the reality is as follows.
1.  The playing field too often is not level; it's not even close to level.
2.  Resources (including financial resources) often are not allocated fairly.
3.  Many countries (including the USA) don't appear to understand the value of having all citizens educated to the highest degree that their capabilities and desires allow.  Some other, more enlightened nations provide access to universal higher education at (for the most part) no cost to the student.
4.  Adequate health care for many people (including many in the USA) is not available, or is too expensive.
5.  Neoliberal politics and corporatist policies (both public and private) greatly favor the Upper Class.  The excuse given is that the Rich supply jobs to everyone else.  Wealth supposedly "trickles down".  That's more often not true than it's true.  Even when it does happen, the jobs too often are temporary and/or part-time, and/or low-paying.
6.  Too many poor people often are relegated to living in neighborhoods which are much too close to the "sinks" of economic throughput wastes.  The resulting exposure to air pollution, water pollution, and land/soil pollution negatively affects their physical health, mental health, and general well-being.
7.  Perpetual wars and insanely bloated defense budgets siphon limited funds away from infrastructure repair/replacement and from social safety nets.  Primarily, they benefit Mega Banks and other Mega Corporations.  The wars often are the result of shrinking natural resources.  Stronger countries want guaranteed access to them.

Conclusion

Pursuing unlimited economic growth, overconsumption, a lack of equity, perpetual wars, essentially unlimited population growth, and neoliberal policies in general have resulted in:
1.  an ecological crisis probably never before imagined (shrinking natural resources, damaged or destroyed ecosystems, disease proliferation, an excess of greenhouse gases, increasing pollution in general, a loss of necessary biodiversity, etc.);
2.  gross social and income inequality (due to a lack of equity and ethics);
3.  a growing discontent with both public and private institutions; and,
4.  an increasing sense of despair over the condition of humanity.

It's time for a significant change in present-day economics, equity, and ethics.  Ecological economics is one part of a sane, sustainable, and much needed path forward.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Saturday, June 13, 2020

A Brief Introduction to Ecological Economics - The Sane Path Forward

Preface

If we are to avoid an ecological catastrophe, then a relatively rapid paradigm shift must occur in a number of key areas.  One of those areas is economics, specifically, the neoliberal/neoclassical economic system that currently is dominant worldwide.  In this essay, I'll explain why I think the shift should be to ecological economics (EE).  The Intro here shall be bare bones; subsequent posts will cover in some depth various aspects (including criticisms) of the subject.

For two-plus decades, I've been puzzled (baffled, really) as to why neoliberal thinking views the economic system as separate from Nature.  Any economic system is embedded in the natural world - in ecosystems, in biogeochemical cycles, and is subject to the Laws of Nature, so to speak.  Do we not extract timber, other plant products, common minerals, rare earth minerals, water, fish, etc. from the natural world?  Do we not all breathe air?  Are not all businesses (and consumers) sometimes subject to the whims of flooding, storms, droughts, natural vectors of disease, and the like?  Obviously, the answer to each question above is YES.  Consequently, it makes no sense to me for anyone to believe that any economic system is not a smaller piece of the natural world.  In a very real sense, even though this planet has innumerable ecosystems, Earth itself is one giant ecosystem.  No artificial system is separate from or larger than that.
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Why Ecological Economics (EE) is the Sane Path Forward

William Rees, founding member and past president of the Canadian Society for EE, wrote a brilliant piece five years ago for the Great Transition Initiative:   https://greattransition.org/publication/economics-vs-the-economy  In that essay, he makes the point that EE recognizes the economy as "an open, wholly dependent subsystem of the ecosphere...".  [Emphasis added.]   Natural resources are extracted from, and wastes are injected back into, Nature.  Any material transformations in these processes are subject to Natural Law (e.g., the Laws of Thermodynamics).  In other words, any economy is not outside of or separate from the natural world.

The neoliberal economic paradigm operates as if the opposite were true.  As a result, our world is now mired in a plethora of ecological disasters:  loss of biodiversity, which is damaging ecosystem services to humanity and nonhuman life; habitat destruction causing (among other things) disease proliferation; crucial ecosystem damage (e.g., to wetlands & their critical functions of flood control and removal of toxic substances from water); acidification of the ocean; the sixth mass extinction event on Earth; air pollution; water pollution, and unsustainable use of water; climate disruption; and more.

EE also takes into consideration the concept of ecological constraints on what Bucky Fuller long ago called "Spaceship Earth".  Except for incoming solar energy (and some meteorites), we live in a finite, closed habitat.  It's not growing larger.  Fortunately for life here, there are many, many ongoing regenerative and biogeochemical cycles of materials on this ship.  When we interfere with those cycles beyond sustainability, we threaten our life support system's proper functioning.  When we do not properly manage industrial wastes, and when we overharvest natural resources beyond sustainability, essentially we are committing species suicide.  EE recognizes these problems, but neoliberal economics mostly ignores them.

In addition to those mentioned above, key elements of EE include the following:
1.  a transition to a steady-state (not stagnant), sustainable economy, rather than the current unlimited growth model;
2.  the incorporation and evaluation of natural capital and ecosystem services in the economic system;
3.  socially fair distribution of goods & services;
4.  sustainable development and growth;
5.  local/regional procurement of goods & services whenever possible;
6.  reduction of material "throughput" in the economy;
7.  a transition away from fossil fuels; and,
8.  the incorporation of ecoethics into economics and the economy in general.
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Conclusion

As we navigate through the Anthropocene geologic time period, we must face up to a few facts that we've been avoiding.
1.  As Rees and others have pointed out:  the finite ecosphere in which we live has highly variable, but limited, regenerative and waste assimilating capacities.
2.  Our current economies around the globe, and all the activities associated with them, are destroying significant sections of our natural life support system.
3.  That destruction primarily is due to the pursuance of unlimited growth, unlimited development, and over-consumption.
4.  The main driver of the above pursuits is essentially unlimited population growth.
5.  Despite some positive applications, our technology has not slowed the pace toward impending, massive ecocatastrophe.  Arguably and overall, it has instead increased that pace.
6.  To avert disaster, we are in need of a rapid cultural and ethical evolutionary change in our thinking and behavior.
7.  A significant part of that change should be the shift away from neoliberal economics.
8.  After much examination of the factors involved, I believe we should adopt and implement some version of ecological economics in as many countries as possible.  That would be a big step toward improving and preserving organized human existence on Spaceship Earth.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Friday, May 15, 2020

Myopia and Deep Denial by Too Many People


Continuing on with the Introduction to Ecological Liberalism---

Any informed, reasonable assessment of the current state of humanity on finite Earth surely would conclude with the following.
1.  The Powers-That-Be and too many Main Street people apparently believe we humans are separate from and superior to Nature... and thus not subject to the Laws of Nature.
2.  As a consequence, we have been and continue to be on a path of subduing Nature, rather than extracting natural capital in a sustainable manner.
3.  The results have been:  overuse, degradation, and dangerous disruption of our natural habitat... plus, pollution in the extreme.
4.  Much of the above is due to propaganda, a lack of knowledge concerning natural science (especially ecology), economics, & ethics, and a deep denial of readily apparent facts.
5.  Too many people have bought into the fallacies of unlimited population and economic growth, expanding consumption/consumerism, and the ability of technology to overcome any problem whatsoever.

Fortunately, amidst all the short-sightedness and denial, many institutions and people are working hard to provide valuable education toward a sustainable, ecological path forward.  Here are a few of them---

https://naturalcapitalproject.stanford.edu/

https://mahb.stanford.edu/blog/never-let-a-good-crisis-go-to-waste/

https://mahb.stanford.edu/

https://psmag.com/magazine/fallacy-of-endless-growth

http://williamrees.org/on-herman-dalys-economics/#more-261

https://thetyee.ca/Analysis/2020/04/06/The-Earth-Is-Telling-Us-We-Must-Rethink-Our-Growth-Society/

If you really want to educate yourself, you're going to have to read and/or watch relevant videos.  Twitter is great, but 140 characters only points the way.  😊

Not only my opinion.  Everyone Be Well

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Introduction to Ecological Liberalism

Preface
Neoliberalism may be on its deathbed.  The ideology began in the late 1930's, bloomed in the 1970's and 1980's, and essentially has ruled the economics, finance, & politics of the developed world ever since.  COVID-19 (SARS-2) has dealt it a blow from which (hopefully) it may never recover.

What will replace it?  Here's some insight---
https://mahb.stanford.edu/blog/coronavirus-spells-the-end-of-the-neoliberal-era-whats-next/
https://www.ehn.org/pandemic-population-covid-19-2645518249.html
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For years I wrote (on another blog) about the disastrous effects of Neoliberalism.  Here's the final essay---
http://individualsovereignty.blogspot.com/2020/05/neoliberalism-has-ruled-for-decades-is.html
With this new blog, it's my intention to provide resources enabling open-minded people to educate and inspire themselves (& hopefully, others) on a path forward.

We'll explore subjects which are both social and scientific.  Because politics has become so polarized in this Land, we'll stay away from that topic to a large degree.  It won't be possible to avoid it entirely.

We'll take it as a given that readers here have a basic Main Street knowledge of natural science, common economics, world affairs, and ethics.  Should anyone encounter a term that's unfamiliar (and not defined here), we'll leave it up to them to do a Search for it.  That approach is necessary because of time and energy constraints on me.  😊

Here's a very brief introduction to Ecological Liberalism---

1.  Liberalism is a moral/ethical philosophy and ideology based on the tenets of liberty, consent of the governed, equality before the Law, and tolerance.  Different forms of the belief sometimes depart from one or more of those tenets.  Despite that, the general definition is valid.

2.  Ecology is the branch of Biology which studies the relationships of organisms to one another and to their physical surroundings.  It's essentially the study of ecosystems (to be defined/discussed in a later post).  There are many sub-branches of Ecology, e.g., wetlands ecology, grasslands ecology, desert ecology, Human Ecology, etc.

Significant parts of Ecological Liberalism have been in existence for decades.  To my knowledge, though, those parts never have coalesced into a unified, single ideology.  [If I'm in error, someone please correct me.]  One of the major parts is Ecological Economics, which has been around for over thirty years.  That will be discussed in depth later.  A group similar to Ecological Economists refers to itself as Environment and Resource Economists.  The noted ecologist, Paul R. Ehrlich, believes the two groups are identical in their principles.  Here's a "fair use" quote from his paper, Key issues for attention from ecological economists:
"Environment and resource economists (hereafter 'ecological economists', which I consider to be an identical group) are the scholars examining the most critical problems that will dominate economics in the twenty-first century.". [Emphasis added.]  From:  https://www.jstor.org/stable/44378980?read-now=1&seq=1

The main components and principles of Ecological Liberalism are:  ecology, economics (including finance), ethics and morality (including spirituality, but not "religion"), and social equity.  This is the best path forward.

In addition to the terms above, future posts here necessarily will explore the following topics:  the biosphere, carrying capacity, biodiversity, unlimited growth, over-consumption, industrial agriculture, corporate globalization, industrial ecology, epidemiological environment, sustainable living, sustainable development, climate disruption, the methane bomb, nuclear problems, food and water problems, ecosystem services, technology, the assault on science, local v. global, ecocentric ideology, the population bomb, the holistic approach, world view, and more.

Because of the current pandemic, the door to serious consideration of alternative views regarding the organization of humanity is wide open.  The massive failure of many institutions (public and private) has become glaringly evident.  A new approach is needed if our species is to survive (& thrive) the many severe problems we now face.  We don't need to throw out the baby with the bath water, but a different path is essential.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well