Title: The Desired Ends of Ecological Economics
1The Desired Ends of Ecological Economics
- And the relationship between visioning and
desirable ends
2Announcements
- Visioning survey will take you 10 minutes. Ill
post it on line after class (or e-mail it?). Do
it before discussion sessions. - Quiz Friday this is the only one that will be
announced. If youve gone to lecture and done
your readings, it will be a breeze - Readings are supplement to lectures, and often
will not be covered in lecture. The reflections
are designed to make you think for yourself about
links between readings, lectures and projects.
3Brief introduction to Ecological Economics
4What is Economics?
- Economics is the Science of the Allocation of
Scarce Resources Among Alternative Desirable Ends
5Questions posed by this definition
- What are the desirable ends?
- What are the scarce resources?
- What are the characteristics of the resources
relevant to allocation? - What do we know about human nature and society
that will help us allocate? - How should the resources be allocated?
6Pre-analytic Vision of Ecological Economics
- Laws of thermodynamics are binding
- Cant create or destroy matter energy
- Entropy increases in an isolated system
- Economic system is sustained and contained by the
global ecosystem
7Pre-analytic Vision of Ecological Economics
(cont.)
- Economic growth displaces ecological functions
through resource depletion and waste - Resources are finite, infinite economic growth is
impossible - Humans are biological organisms that depend on
the ecosystem for survival - Ecosystem services have become the scarcest
resources
8What are the desirable ends?
- The highest possible quality of life for this and
future generations - Quality of life is a lot more than just what we
consume
9Instrumental ends
- What do are the minimal requirements we need for
achieving a high QOL for this and future
generations? - Ecological Sustainability
- Just distribution
- Economic efficiency
- Participatory democracy?
10Ecological Sustainability
- Sustainable scale
- Scale is the size of the economic system relative
to the ecosystem that contains and sustains it - Has the history of development in Vermont been
sustainable? - Is it a desirable end?
- Whats the future ever done for you?
- How do we know if weve got it?
- Scientific question
- Cant be answered using standard science, i.e.
experiments and repeatable observations
11Whose projects focus on sustainability?
12Just Distribution
- Ethical question
- Poverty implies a low QOL
- If we cant have growth, we cant grow our way
out of poverty - Follows from sustainable scale
- How can we care about the well being of future
generations and not care about the well being of
people alive today? - How can we ask people who dont have enough today
to sacrifice for the future?
13Just Distribution
- How do we know if weve got it?
- Two types of justice
- Procedural justice
- Are markets just?
- Do we all play by the same rules?
- Just deserts
- Are markets just?
14Just Distribution basic rules?
- You get to keep what you earn with the sweat of
your brow - Locke and Marx
- Who creates the 4 capitals?
- You share in the wealth created by nature or by
society as a whole - Alaska permanent fund
- Culture, knowledge
- Social capital
- Built capital
- You pay for what you take from others
- sky trust
15Whose projects focus on just distribution?
16Efficient Allocation
- How do we create the most of what is desired from
what is available? - Is the market best at this?
- What role did markets play in the ecological
restoration of Vermont? - How do we know if weve got it?
- Pareto optimality and markets
- Markets are supposed to balance what is possible
with what is desirable - Are there markets in the things we desire?
17Whose projects focus on efficiency?
18How are these instrumental goals related to each
other?
19Sustainability and Distribution
- Same ethical issue
- The poorest do not care about the future
- The richest consume the bulk of the worlds
resources - No sustainability without just distribution
20Sustainability and efficiency
- Supply must be determined by ecological signals,
not economic ones - Sustainable scale determines what is available to
allocate - Economic growth and diminishing marginal utility
21Distribution and efficiency
- Markets balance supply and demand.
- Demand is preferences weighted by wealth
- Different outcome for different distributions
- Diminishing marginal utility and distribution
- Who gets more QOL out of 1000, a starving
Bangladeshi or Bill Gates? - Negative externalities
- Positional wealth and status
- Distribution of built capital vs. natural
capital, e.g. mangroves
22Distribution and Democracy
- Wealth, power and rent-seeking behavior
- "We can have a democratic society, or we can have
the concentration of great wealth in the hands of
the few. We cannot have both." - Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis
23Visioning and Desirable Ends
24The Necessity for Vision
- Current vision is unsustainable in absence of
star trek technologies - Systemic change requires societys agreement
- If we dont know where were going, we might not
get there
25Visioning clarifies alternatives
- Is ever increasing consumption the ultimate goal
towards which we should strive? - Is it even a desirable goal?
- We might be lost, but were making great time.
- If were not careful, well get where were going
26Visioning and Desirable Ends
- Visioning is an approach to identifying desirable
ends - Visioning is a continuous process, not a one time
thing - Broad participation in the visioning process
assures buy in and commitment to goals - Sustainability as fulfillment, not sacrifice