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Degrowth

from Jason Hickel and RWER

As the climate crisis worsens and the carbon budgets set out by the Paris Agreement shrink, climate scientists and ecologists have increasingly come to highlight economic growth as a matter of concern. Growth drives energy demand up and makes it significantly more difficult – and likely infeasible – for nations to transition to clean energy quickly enough to prevent potentially catastrophic levels of global warming. In recent years, IPCC scientists have argued that the only feasible way to meet the Paris Agreement targets is to actively scale down the material throughput of the global economy. Reducing material throughput reduces energy demand, which makes it easier to accomplish the transition to clean energy.

Ecological economists acknowledge that this approach, known as degrowth, is likely to entail reducing aggregate economic activity as presently measured by GDP. While such a turn might seem inimical to human development, and indeed threaten to trigger a range of negative social consequences, proponents of degrowth argue that a planned reduction of throughput can be accomplished in high-income nations while at the same time maintaining and even improving people’s standards of living. Policy proposals focus on redistributing existing income, shortening the working week, and introducing a job guarantee and a living wage, while expanding access to public goods.

As debates unfold around what these policies might look like and how to implement them, here I step back to consider the deeper economic logic of degrowth theory.  read more

  1. September 3, 2023 at 10:26 am

    The term ‘degrowth’ is unfortunate. It will strike most people as negative, and it isn’t clear about ‘growth of what’. Otherwise Jason Hickel’s analysis of growth and how to fix it is the best, in my opinion. His identification of ‘artificial scarcity’ is central.

    Most of the anti-growth debate just assumes GDP as the thing that is growing, or not. But GDP is a worse-than-useless measure of anything except monetary transactions.

    What is need for clarity is to distinguish quality from quantity. We can reduce the *quantity* of material throughput even as we improve the *quality* of our lives.

    With this conception, you can tell people about the benefits of ever-increasing quality without scaring them about decreasing quantity, by circularity and by aiming for *enough*, rather than ever more stuff.

    This is explained in Economy, Society, Nature (right-hand column) and in my other works at https://betternaturebooks.net/my-books/

  2. September 19, 2023 at 5:21 pm

    To me the degrowthers look like mainstream turned upside down. Both believe all aconomic activity are the same. Neither seem to understand that different activities may have vastly different results.

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