Title: Topic 9 Economic Sustainability
1Topic 9Economic Sustainability
- Assoc Prof Dr Sharifah Norazizan Syed Abd Rashid,
APPM - Department of Social Development Science
- Faculty of Human Ecology
- Universiti Putra Malaysia
- sharifah_at_putra.upm.edu.my
2Content
- Background
- Why Economic Sustainability?
- What is the difference between economic growth,
economic development, and environmentally
sustainable economic development? - What are the earths main type of resources? How
can they be depleted or degraded? - Definitions
- Principles
- Practice
3Sustainable development
- Sustainable development is a pattern of resource
use that aims to meet human needs while
preserving the environment so that these needs
can be met not only in the present, but also for
generations to come. The term was used by the
Brundtland Commission which coined what has
become the most often-quoted definition of
sustainable development as development that
"meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to
meet their own needs." - A representation of sustainability showing how
both economy and society are constrained by
environmental limits
4Ecological WorldviewThe Hierarchy of
Sustainability
A representation of sustainability showing how
both economy and society are constrained by
environmental limits
Nature/Environment
Society
Economy
5Economic Worldview
6The Essentials of Sustainable Economic
Development
- Todays industrial economy is not sustainable. It
is depleting resources and degrading the natural
environment. - Sustainable economies must meet the needs of the
present without diminishing opportunities for the
future. - All economic value comes from the earth or from
people from natural or human resources
ultimately from energy. - Sustainable development must invest in nature and
society even when there are no economic
incentives to do so. - Sustainable development depends on social and
ethical values, which are different from economic
values.
7- ECONOMIC OBJECTIVES
- Growth
- Equity
- Efficiency
- SOCIAL OBJECTIVES
- Empowerment
- Participation
- Social Mobility
- Social Cohesion
- Cultural Identity
- Institutional Development
- ECOLOGICAL OBJECTIVES
- Ecosystem Integrity
- Carrying Capacity
- Biodiversity
- Global Issues
8Economic Growth and Economic Development
- Economic growth increase in goods and
services. - Requires more producers and consumers (i.e.,
population growth) - and/or, more production and consumption per
person. - Economic development improvement of human
living standards by economic growth.
9The growth of the economy undermines
sustainability
- depletes resources
- exceeds global and bioregional carrying capacity
- destroys ecosystems
- overwhelms natural waste disposal sinks
- alters the climate
- wages war on subsistence cultures
- produces shocking mal-distribution of wealth and
income. - Economics and Sustainability must be harmonized.
10contd
- Global crisis of mainstream economic systems
- (capitalist socialist) energy crisis,
environmental crisis, food crisis, financial
crisis, spiritual crisis marginalization of
less developed countries - Globalization of poverty creeping poverty in
both developed and less developed country.
11IBN KHALDUNS IDEAS ON ECONOMIC GROWTH.
- Higher taxes may lead to lower economic growth
and tax revenue - Higher government spending may reduce private
business activities, economic growth and revenue
- More growth may lead to social costs
- Excessive spending and luxury habits may cause
unethical and immoral behavior, inflation,
unemployment, poverty and environmental
degradation.
12Costs of Economic Growth
- CONGESTION
- POLLUTION
- EPIDEMIC
- INFLATION
- UNEMPLOYMENT
- POVERTY
- CORRUPTION
- CRIME
- MIGRATION
13Costs of Economic Growth
14The Challenge of Economic Sustainability
- A sustainable economy must provide permanent
sustenance for the individual, social, and
ethical well-being of all, including those of
present and future generations. - It must meet the material or tangible needs of
individuals. It must sustain the economic and
social health of families, communities, and
societies and the productivity and ecological
health of nature. And, it must provide a means
for each generation to meet its needs while
fulfilling its ethical responsibilities for the
future of humanity.
15- Sustainability is a community's control and
prudent use of all forms of capital - physical capital
- human capital
- natural capital
- social capital, and
- cultural capital
- to ensure that present and future generations
can attain a high degree of economic security and
achieve democracy while maintaining the integrity
of the ecological systems upon which all life and
production depends" (p. 46).
16How did the Brundtland Commission operationalize
sustainability?
- Seven strategic imperatives for sustainable
development - reviving (economic) growth
- changing the quality of growth
- meeting essential needs for jobs, food, energy,
water, and sanitation - ensuring a sustainable level of population
- conserving and enhancing the resource base
- reorienting technology and managing risk
- merging environment and economics in
decision-making. - (Hackett, 2006)
17Sustainability from an economic perspective
- Economist Robert Solow (1987 Nobel Laureate)
- Sustainability is just what economists have been
talking about (in the economic growth and
environment literature). - Sustainability is making sure that each
successive generation is no worse off than the
current one, indefinitely. - Argument physical capital (durable assets) and
human capital (knowledge/health) are substitutes
for natural capital. - Two key questions (Toman (1994), c.f. Kolstad
(2000)) - What obligation does one generation owe to
others? Ethical/moral question
18Economic Sustainability
- It is about understanding that economic growth is
only sustainable if it simultaneously improves
the Quality of Life and the environment. - Economic sustainability focuses on the importance
of stable economic growth - Egs of Economic Sustainability
- - elimination of extreme wealth and poverty
- - be content with little
- - profit sharing
- - voluntary giving
- - work as worship
- - moderation
19Economic Sustainability
- The use of various strategies for employing
existing resources optimally so that that a
responsible and beneficial balance can be
achieved over the longer term. - Economic Sustainability is the maintenance of
capital or keeping capital intact.Read more
http//www.businessdictionary.com/definition/econo
mic-sustainability.htmlixzz1sPKFp1TJ
20Economics Principles for Sustainability
Sustainability Meeting the needs of the present
without diminishing opportunities for the future
21It takes getting the principles right!
- Ecological/Environment Principles
- holism, diversity, interdependence
- Social Principles
- trust, kindness, courage
- Economic Principles
- scarcity, efficiency, sovereignty
22Principles of Creating a Sustainable Economic
Development
- Ensuring a Better Quality of Life for the
Community, Now and for Generations to Come - Maintenance of High and Stable Levels of Economic
Growth and Employment - Prudent Use of Natural Resources and the
Community Competitive Advantages - Ensuring Social Progress Which Recognizes the
Needs of a Diverse Community - Considering the Long-Term Implication of Decisions
23Ecological Principles of Economic Sustainability
- Holism A whole is more than the sum of its
parts the relationships among the parts are as
important as the parts. - Diversity Differences among the parts give
wholes the resistance and resilience to withstand
adversity and the ability to renew, regenerate,
and evolve. - Interdependence Mutually beneficial
relationships among interdependent parts of
wholes make them something more than the sum of
their parts emergent properties. - Ecological principles must also be respected in
social and economic relationships society and
the economy are part of nature.
24Social Principles of Economic Sustainability
- Trust Results from honesty, fairness, and
responsibility. Validations of trust strengthen
social relationships. Violations of trust weaken
and destroy social relationships. - Kindness Results from empathy, respect, and
compassion. - Courage Requires commitment in spite of
adversity. Good intentions without action are of
little consequences. It takes moral courage to be
trusting and kind. - Social principles also must be respected in
relationships with nature and in sustainable
economic relationships.
25Essential Economic Principles of Sustainability
- Scarcity Economic value is determined by
scarcity, not by human necessity. Some thing
essential for economic sustainability have little
if any economic value. - Efficiency Economic value relative to economic
costs. Economic sustainability requires efficient
use of natural and human resources. - Sovereignty People must have freedom to make
informed economic choices, without coercion or
persuasion. - Economic principles must also be respected in
social relationships and in relationships with
nature.
26Addressing Sustainability
- What can we do to be more sustainable
- Cut down on use of energy
- Recycle
- Adopt a more environmentally transport
- Use renewable energy resources eg wind power
solar power tidal power hydroelectric power and
biofuels.
27What can economists do?
- While Science and Technology will do much of the
work - Need to better understand the interaction between
economy and environment. - Economy Environment
- Formulate appropriate government policy taxes
and subsidy - Understand equity implication of economic
policies and climate change and devise corrective
measures (such as taxes on carbon and technology
transfer).
28And in Practice?
- Identify challenges to sustainability
- Government policy measures
- Industry management approaches
29Provide Resources
- Link economic concepts to sustainability issues
website - http//www.montgomerycollege.edu/sdas/index.htm
- John Ikerd (2012), The Essentials of Economic
Sustainability, Kumarian Press.
30Thank You