Environment and Economy Is the tension inevitable?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Environmental and Ecological Economics We cannot solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them. -Attributed to Albert.
Advertisements

What is Economics? A crash course.
How did Smith, Malthus, and Ricardo support industrialization and capitalism? Chapter 9 Section 4.
Adam Smith Chapter 4 January 29-February 2, 2007.
LECTURE XIII FORESTRY ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT. Introduction  If forestry is to contribute its full share to a more abundant life for the world’s increasing.
Mercantilism and Physiocracy
19.0 Conclusion Debate over intervention vs. non-intervention goes back two hundred years Jean-Baptiste Say (1803) – market system can and does.
ECON 4925 Resource Economics Autumn 2010 Lecture 1 Introduction Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund Lecture 1.
International Trade Theory
International Business
Global Trade Environment
Economy System where scarce resources are allocated among alternative uses Economics Study of how economy functions In other words Study of the use of.
The Market System and the Circular Flow 02 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
An Introduction to Agricultural Economics
Is Economy Enough in Examining Environment? Kıvanç DÜZ
Schools of Economic Thought Chapter 1. Introduction The word "economics" is derived from oikonomikos, which means skilled in household management. The.
Laissez-Faire Economics
Economics- Approaches and Environmental Implications
How the Government Fixes Economic Instability. As the American economy slid into recession in 1929, economists relied on the classical theory of economics,
Chapter 4: Adam Smith Questions for Review, Discussion and Research (pp ) 1, 2, 4, 7, 9.
1 Chapter 7 Section 1 Global Economics Objectives Describe how international trade benefits consumers. Explain the significance of currency exchange rates.
Unit 4 Sustainable outdoor Relationships In this unit we will explore key characteristics of healthy environment and explore some of the threats to maintaining.
CGC 1DI Sustainable Planet: Natural Resources Primer.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND CLASSICAL ECONOMICS 1. ADAM SMITH AND THE CLASSICAL SCHOOL 2. DAVID RICARDO & THE THEORY OF COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE 3. THOMAS.
Unit 9 External Sector Dynamics “Domestic trade is among us, international is between us and them.”
History of Economic Thought (Modern Schools of Economic Theory)
LECTURE 4: CLASSICAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Dr. Aidan Regan Website: Twitter:
TOPIC 9 ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY. The Definition of Economy The wealth and resources of a country or region, especially in terms of the production and.
From Mercantilism to Capitalism: Adam Smith and the
Mercantilism.
The Industrial Revolution
Starter How do specialization and division of labor work together?
ECONOMIC THEORY Influence of Enlightenment Thinking Adam Smith ‘The Wealth of Nations’ Objective: Explain how the ideas from the Enlightenment changed.
Origins of Western Democratic Liberalism Social 30-2.
Theories of World Economy
By: Robert Clark Period 7
Why are all goods and services scarce?
PHYSIOCRACY Begins in OVERVIEW OF THE PHYSIOCRATS A reaction to mercantilism and to the feudal system of old regime in France. Too detail regulation.
Facoltà di Giurisprudenza 2011/2012 Lazea Claudia Maria Classe MO1.
Major Schools of Economic Theory
Sociology 323 Economy & Society Class 4 – Economics For Everyone Part 1.
Basic Economic Concepts Economics: the discipline that deals with the allocation of scarce resources for the purpose of fulfilling society’s needs and.
INT 200: Global Capitalism and its Discontents Adam Smith & the Industrial Revolution.
Economic Vocabulary Terms. What is Economics? Social science that seeks to describe the factors which determine the production, distribution and consumption.
19th Century Economics edit from same title by WBPhillips.
Ch 2. Economics may appear to be the study of complicated tables and charts, statistics and numbers, but, more specifically, it is the study of what constitutes.
Answering the Three Economic Questions Ch.2-1 What key economic questions must every society answer? What basic economic goals do societies have? What.
International Trade Grade 13 IBDP. International Trade Think, Pair Share List 5 reasons why Nations Trade with each other What factors influence what.
4 Factors of Production Economies PrinciplesDefinitionsPPF
Economic Systems Economic Goals Most societies share certain basic economic goals. Societies rank the importance of these goals based on their needs.
Understanding Sustainable Development HS 419 Lecture 1.
Production Possibilities Absolute and Comparative Advantage.
Mercantilism. From Mercantilism to Adam Smith: The Evolution of the Modern Capitalist System.
What does “Economics” mean? Introduction to Economics Lecturer: Alberto Romero Ania It is a social science that studies the efficient allocation of scarce.
Economics The Economic Problem Scarcity Absolute & Comparative Advantage Opportunity Cost Economic Systems Free Trade v. Protectionism v. Fair Trade.
 What is an economic System?  Method used by a society to produce and distribute goods and services  Which economic system a country uses depends on.
From Mercantilism to Adam Smith: The Evolution of the Modern Capitalist System.
Romanticism ( ). An international artistic and a philosophical movement which redefined the fundamental ways in which people thought about themselves.
Basic Economic Concepts
Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
Mercantilism.
Basic Economic Concepts
Basic Economic Concepts
6th Steering Committee meeting, 7 and 8 April 2011, Geneva
Mercantilists and Physiocrats
Industrialization & Global Capitalism
Why are all goods and services scarce?
The Theory of Trade and Investment
Origins of Classical Liberalism
Roots of Modern Capitalism
Presentation transcript:

Environment and Economy Is the tension inevitable?

What do we mean by the ‘environment’? The source of all the resources that are used in the production of goods that are sold in the marketplace or that we use to support our lifestyles Is it distinct from ‘land’? How do we feel about the ‘exploitation’ of resources?

Environmental stresses interrelate Hundreds of thousands of subsistence farmers are drawn into an economic system that itself relies on fossil fuels where their previous existence did not. Dam projects disturb the local ecosystem, causing species loss and loss of topsoil China builds new power stations to facilitate production To offset CO2 China builds vasts hydroelectric dams (using energy and producing CO 2 via the production of concrete)

Thinking in systems

Rethinking economics concepts Efficiency: energy or financial efficiency? Optimality: who do we consider in the allocation? Sustainability ◦Brundtland definition? ◦Strong sustainability (no substitution for natural capital) vs. weak sustainability (substitution is possible)

Defining the schools Neoclassical economics: no particular need to address the environment as a special issue, since the market will naturally resolve all problems, including environmental problems Environmental economists: environment as a source of special concern in their work, but use the methods and tools of neoclassical economics Ecological economists: attempt to unite the understandings of ecology and of economics Green and ecosocialist: the problem is structural and related to the way capitalism functions as a system

Environmental economics aims to achieve sustainability by the indirect means of financial instruments such as taxes and subsidies. Ecological economics, by contrast, places economics within the systemic context of ecology. It therefore questions the possibility of ensuring sustainability solely by means of internalizing environmental costs into the market mechanism.... Of course this ‘ecological’ approach can be combined with the policy instruments of environmental economics... Authors in the green paradigm tend to take this pragmatic approach to the question of the suitability of different forms of intervention in the market. (Greenwood, 2007: 78).

Way back when... ‘The physiocrats of mid-eighteenth- century France—the first economic theorists—tried to explain economics in accordance with natural law and saw agriculture and Mother Earth as the source of all net value.’ (Daly and Townsend, 1993: 13). Minimal political interference

Physiocrats vs. Mercantilists The mercantilists argued for a market regulated so as to ensure the most efficient and rapid production of manufactured goods, which could then be traded They began to equate wealth with money, as opposed to the physiocratic view that all wealth came from the land The state should accumulate reserves of precious metals The role of the state was to protect domestic production and trade through the use of tariffs and subsidies.

The ‘marginalisation’ of land At this stage ‘the land’, which we might see as at least partly analogous to ‘the environment’ slips from the central place in thinking about the economy that it had always held This loss of focus on the environment as the true source of wealth may help to explain the uncomfortable relationship that has developed between the economy and the environment.

Classical political economy Adam Smith, David Ricardo and John Stuart Mill Foregrounded the role of labour Adam Smith: pin- making and the division of labour Skill, innovation and productivity are the sources of wealth

Where is the environment?

Placing the Schools ‘Sustainable development’: three circles as interrelated, but separate, so that there are some parts of the economy that have nothing to do with society or the environment. Neoclassical economists focus predominantly on the right- hand circle Environmental economists put more emphasis on the environmental circle Ecological economists: focus on the left-hand circle Green economists see the three circles as interrelated (as on the right) Anti-capitalist economists focus on the upper and left-hand circles