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Modern mainstream economics: science or ideology? Hungarian Academy of Science 27. November 2006 Prof.Kasim Tatić, Ph.D. Institute for Advanced Studies on Science, Technology and Society Graz School of Economics and Business Sarajevo [email protected] • Ideology is a shared belief system that may serve at once to motivate and to justify. • It generally asserts normative values and includes causative beliefs. How do things happen? What does it all mean? • An ideology may be utopian and progressive or protective of the status quo. • It offers a way in which to order the world, defining enemies and allies, dangers and opportunities, us and them. • Ideologies are formal, structured, and involve their own particular logic, often appearing • in the guise of science or objective knowledge. • Ideology is implicated in collective action, as criticism, explanation, or promise. • It is represented in symbols and beliefs held by a community and is publicly expressed. • Science in the broadest sense refers to any system of knowledge attained by verifiable means. • In a more restricted sense, science refers to a system of acquiring knowledge based on empiricism and experimentation, as well as to the organized body of knowledge humans have gained by such research. • Fields of science are commonly classified along two major lines: • Natural sciences, the study of the natural phenomena; • Social sciences, the systematic study of human behavior and societies. • Neoliberalism - A political movement beginning in the 1960s that blends traditional liberal concerns with an emphasis on free market and continuous economic growth. • It is against government regulation, environmentalism and fair trade. • Neoclassical economics, as the Chicago School of thought is now called, has become an international elite consensus, one that provides the foundation for the entire global political economy. • In the United States, young members of the middle and upper-middle class first learn its precepts in the academy. • Polls routinely show that economists and the general public have widely divergent views on the economy, but among the well-educated that gap is far narrower. • A 2001 study ... showed that those with college degrees are more likely to subscribe to the views of neoclassical economists than the general public... • Because neoclassical economics always presents itself as a value-neutral description of the world, its ideological commitments can be adopted by those who learn it without any recognition that they are ideological. This is the source of some very spirited debate within the field itself. • A growing global movement of “heterodox” economists has criticized the ideological confines and blindspots of the neoclassical approach. • As Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz put it, the dominance of the neoclassical model is a “triumph of ideology over science.” • When equity and efficiency tradeoffs ... arise, mainstream economists are systematically biased in favor of efficiency because that’s what they are experts on. • Efficiency they can measure and analyze. • Fairness? That’s the turf of philosophers and politicians. • According to mainstream economists it is notoriously difficult to measure fairness; it is notoriously inefficient to try and that is why the mainstream economists efficiently pass it along to those to whom the opportunity cost of arguing is zero: the philosophers. • "Efficiency' can really only apply to machines or machine-like actions. That is, one can tinker with a machine to make it go faster, (car engines), or do more maneuvers etc; That can be measured. • But markets are not machines, they're fictional or abstract creations, (in the same sense money is), that allow transactions between humans. Because they're fictional or abstract, they can be created any number of ways. • There are no "markets-in-themselves" to use a Kantian terminology. • Markets can be created to reflect certain social/ philosophical/ religious values that can be "measured" in a sense. The present-day market reflects the values that society now holds. Those values are, (as far as I see), the accumulation of material wealth and the expansion of means to create more wealth. • They are not values that hold the needs of future generations in view, nor the environment, nor the spread of economic and social equality to as many as possible. • This tendency is most pronounced in discussions of economic growth, and how the benefits of that growth should be distributed. • Nobel Laureate Bob Lucas, said that “once you start to think about the benefits of high growth, it’s hard to think about anything else.” In other words, first worry about how best to grow the pie, then how to slice it up. Let efficiency trump equity, create wealth, and then you can use the extra wealth you’ve created to alleviate inequality. • This makes a certain amount of sense. But when this rhetoric comes to dominate our politics, the problem of inequality is never addressed. • NOW is always the time for growing, LATER is always the time to address concerns about equity. ... • In 2003 the top 1 percent of households owned 57.5 percent of corporate wealth, up from 53.4 percent the year before, according to a Congressional Budget Office analysis of the latest income tax data. • The top group's share of corporate wealth has grown by half since 1991, when it was 38.7 percent. • From 2003 to 2004, the average incomes of the bottom 99 percent of households grew by less than 3 percent, after adjusting for inflation. • In contrast, the average incomes of the top one percent of households experienced a jump of almost 17 percent, after adjusting for inflation. (Census data show that real median income fell between 2003 and 2004. • The problem is that mainstream economics cannot offer a coherent development concept except "let's just go on and see what happens". • “The whole mainstream economics focuses on economic growth, how fast we can make economies grow. Economic growth does tend to raise all boats." • In the literal sense of causing sea levels to rise, they may have a point. • Existing model of economic growth represent an inefficient use of human resources. • The hidden model that lies at the heart of neoclassical economics as it exists in practice is Social Darwinism, the belief that biology and science support the existence of a particular social order, the social order which, by happy circumstance and the virtue of our history, happens to be the one in place at this time. Globalization What is sustainable development What is the link between the Bible Friedrich Nietzche, and sustainable development ? Some key features of sustainable development Can we have growth and environmental sustainability? • Yes - but it needs to be: – Smart – Appropriate – Low carbon – Efficient in resource use Can we have growth and environmental sustainability? • Developed countries have managed to increase resource efficiencies as technology has improved • But…consumption growth has swamped these gains in efficiency of units • We need innovation in consumption and distribution as well as in production • globalization represents the process of increasing convergence and interdependence of national economies and of the international scope and availability of markets, distribution systems, capital, labor, and technology. • Globalization on all levels leads toward continuous requests for increased competitiveness. • Our goal is to highlight the role and significance of the environment and natural resources in the process of creation of competitive advantages in a globaly connected world. Competitiveness • Competitiveness can be thought of as the ability of a company (or industry, or country) to constantly increase its productivity in creating differntiated goods that respond to market demand, and to bring those goods to markets efficiently, while at the same time fostering an increasingly discriminating customer base. (Porter) EU Thematic Strategy on the Sustainable Use of Resources • Objective: • “ensuring that the consumption of resources and their associated impacts do not exceed the carrying capacity of the environment and breaking the linkages between economic growth and resource use” • (common position adopted by the council 27/9/2001) Concerns • growth of economies outweighs resource productivity improvements • waste generation is 1:1 coupled to economic growth • emissions of selected pollutants is decreasing but aggregated pressures continue to increase: territorial degradation, urban sprawl, etc. Concerns • green house gas emissions from transport and tourism continues to increase • biodiversity, tropical forests, fish stocks, groundwater quality, urban air quality, ozone layer integrity, etc. are endangered Energy data OECD 1998 TPS (1) 213 400 TPS/GDP (2) 10.9 TPS/capita (3) 196 2020 275 622 8.0 221 change +30% -19% +18% (1) Total primary energy supply in PJ (2) TPS divided by GDP in GJ/100 US dollars (3) GJ/capita Energy units are measured in petajoules (PJ). One PJ equals (approximately) 278 million kWh of electricity; 25 million cubic metres of natural gas; 24 thousand tonnes of oil equivalent; and 34 thousand tonnes of coal equivalent. Decoupling • The term decoupling refers to breaking the link between “environmental bads” and “economic goods.” • Absolute decoupling is said to occur when the environmentally relevant variable is stable or decreasing while the economic driving force is growing. • Decoupling is said to be relative when the growth rate of the environmentally relevant variable is positive, but less than the growth rate of the economic variable. Decoupling • Decoupling can be measured by decoupling indicators that have an environmental pressure variable for numerator and an economic variable as denominator. Sometimes, the denominator or driving force may be population growth or some other variable. • The evidence presented in the OECD Report “Indicators to Measure Decoupling of Environmental Pressure from Economic Growth” shows that relative decoupling is widespread in OECD Member countries. Decoupling • The concept of decoupling is attractive for its simplicity. Graphs displaying a rising GDP juxtaposed with diminishing pollutant emissions, or pollutant emissions rising faster than GDP, convey a very clear message. Decoupling • However, graphs of synthetic decoupling indicators often convey mixed, or double, messages. In a growing economy, relative decoupling will imply that environmental pressures are still rising. • Equally, if economic activity is falling, relative or even absolute decoupling may not imply a positive development for society as a whole. Decoupling • Decoupling concept has no automatic link to the environment’s capacity to sustain, absorb or resist pressures of various kinds (deposition, discharges). In the case of renewable natural resources, a meaningful interpretation of the relationship of environmental pressure to economic driving forces will require information about the intensity of use of the resource in question, i.e. of harvesting rate compared to renewal rate. Increase in energy consumption • According to Joke Waller-Hunter, former Director of the Environment Directorate of OECD, despite ecoefficiency improvements, overall environmental degradation has persisted in most cases. OECD countries reduced the energy intensity of their economies by 31% in the period 1973-1996, but they increased total energy consumption by 23% over the same period. Their total energy use is expected to grow by a further 30-50% to 2020. (Waller-Hunter 2000). GHG emission • The similar situation is with greenhouse gas emissions. While the output of GHG emissions relative to GDP has fallen for OECD countries in recent years, total absolute emissions have risen. Under current policies, OECD countries could increase GHG emissions by a further 30% to 2010, far from the overall Kyoto Protocol target of a 5% reduction from 1990 levels to 2008-2012. Transport increase • In some cases, there are no signs of any real improvement. This is true of transportation, where motor vehicle kilometers traveled in the OECD are expected to increase by at least 65% in the period 1990-2020 and passenger air kilometers are expected almost to quadruple. Increse in energy consumption • “Energy is a key resource for our economy. Overall demand is predicted to grow substantially over the coming decades, by 30% for the OECD countries and by 70% for the world as a whole in the next 30 years. For the EU, these increases are smaller than the targeted doubling of the economy over the same period; if efforts are maintained, the decoupling of energy use from economic growth will continue. However, energy consumption will still increase in absolute terms (European Commission 2003,). EU Directorate forecast • An annual economic growth of 3% leads to a doubling of the economy in 25 years . (An annual growth of 3% leads to a cumulated growth in 25 years with a factor of (1.03)25 = 2. Hundred years of growth gives rise to a cumulated growth of (1.03)100 = 20). EU Directorate forecast • If this growth is realized within the production and consumption patterns of today, including the use of currently available technologies, the resource use will grow with a factor 2 as well. In this case there is a 1:1 coupling of economic growth and resource use. EU Directorate forecast Fortunately, this scenario will not happen. The economic growth is not simply realized by doing more of the same. In the coming decades a considerable amount of value will be created, which material and energy intensity is less than today’s products and services. Reasons: The growing contribution of services to the economy and The ongoing improvement of technologies is another one. EU Directorate forecast • Nevertheless, the increase of energy and material use will be considerable, e.g. the energy use in OECD countries is expected to grow in the next 20 years by 35% and by 51% worldwide (OECD 2001). This means that economic growth and resource use are decoupled to some extent. Rresource use is growing, but less steep than the growth of the economy. This phenomenon is called relative decoupling. Absolute decoupling would take place if the growth of the resource use would be negative” (European Commission 2002,) Decoupling resource use from economic growtth • If the resource use increases it may be assumed that various environmental pressures, associated with resource use, also grow. Environmental statistics show that this is indeed the case, although the growth of various environmentally relevant variables is considerable less than the economic growth and less than the growth of the resource use as well. Thus the phenomenon of decoupling is also visible if environmental pressures are related to economic growth. • For example, the growth rate of emissions of sulphur dioxide is less than the growth rate of GDP. However, since many environmental pressures are still increasing decoupling is only relative for these emissions. Decoupling environmental pressure from economic growth Decoupling of resource use and environmental pressure from economic growth • In drafting this figure it is assumed that the growth of the environmental pressure is less than the • growth of resource use, both in case of relative decoupling and absolute decoupling. • The reason is obvious: if the input of resources per unit of GDP can be reduced, the environmental pressure per unit of GDP will also decrease. • • It may even be expected that the latter decreases steeper than the first, since using new environmental technologies the environmental pressure per unit of resource use may be reduced considerably. • The environmental problems that caused the greatest concern in the past were related to point- source pollution, which could be tackled by a "cherrypicking" method: the easiest issues were largely dealt with, leaving behind the more difficult questions to be faced in the future. • Moreover, most problems were tackled by good house keeping attitudes and using end of pipe • technologies. In order to make a next step, inherently benign technologies have to be developed and applied, which will require institutional changes on international level (such as getting the prices right). The present situation may be visualized as follows: Relating economic growth, resource productivity and eco-efficiency • The dashed (blue) line represents the increase of resource productivity between 1800 and 2000. • For example, advances in steam engine technology since 1750 have reduced coal consumption per unit of power 25 fold. This improvement is by far not a linear process: • between 1800 and 1900 the improvement was approximately a factor of 10, leaving a factor of 2.5 for the period between 1900 and today. • Finally the dotted (green) line represents the eco-efficiency improvement which is needed to compensate the economic growth and to achieve decoupling of economic growth and environmental pressure. • Decoupling thus requires an eco-efficiency revolution, similar to the resource productivity revolution in the 19th and 20th century. Thus: • - mining and agriculture should exploit ecological resources environmentally benign and • - emissions from industry and households should be reduced or should become nondestructive for eco-systems (e.g. biodegradable). Efficiency • Bringezu and Schutz argue that in order to reduce global resource extraction by half, “industrial countries should increase the efficiency of overall primary resource requirements of energy and materials in the next 30 to 50 years by 4 to 10 times”. Environmental Sustainability Index (ESI) • ESI measures overall progess toward environmental sustainability for 142 countries. • Environmental sustainability is measured through 76 variables grouped into 21 indicators: Air Quality Water Quantity Water Quality ESI Biodiversity Land Reducing Air Pollution Reducing Water Sress Natural Resources Management Reducing Ecosystem Stresses Reducing Waste and Consumption Pressures Reducing Population Growth Basic Human Sustenance ESI – Reducing Environment-Related Natural Disaster Vulnerability – Environmental Health – Science and Technology – Environmental Governance – Private Sector Responsivess – Eco-Efficiency – Participation in Internatinal Colaborative Efforts – Greenhouse Gas Emissions – Reducing Transboundary Pressures ESI • ESI tracks relative success for each contry in five core compnents: – Environmental Systems – Reducing Environmental Stresses – Reducing Human Vulnerability – Social and Institutional Capacity – Global Stewardship ESI Finland case Decoupling: Development of Finland’s real GDP, emissions, and use of materials and energy Global competitiveness report 2004-2005 • The Report on Global Competitiveness has ranked 103 countries according to the value of two indexes: • Economic Growth Competitiveness Index, and • Business Sector Competitiveness Index. Global competitiveness report 2004-2005 • Economic Growth Competitiveness Index is composed of the three component indexes; technological index, public institutions index and macroeconomic environment index. • Detailed analysis of the content and the structure of these component indexes shows that neither of them takes into account the element of the environment. Global competitiveness report 2004-2005 • In the process of calculation of the Business Sector Competitiveness two basic segments were taken into account: functioning and the strategy of companies, and the business environment in the country. Global competitiveness report 2004-2005 • Certain mistakes and shortcomings in the methodology have occurred, primarily due to the wish of the authors to apply the same common methodological framework to very different countries. Global competitiveness report 2004-2005 • As of natural resources, the orthodox economic thought has been used which treats the natural resources simply as a given, or as a supposition which will in one way or the other, somewhere and in some form would always be available to entrepreneurs, and their technology used in the production processes. Global competitiveness report 2004-2005 • The Report completely ignores principles of sustainable development which is primarily based on the recognition and acceptance of the long run. • Professor Michael Porter, as the main author of the methodlogical framework and the theoretical background of the Report, based his approach to competitivenes on the premises of the neoclasical economy underestimating the role of natural resources and neglecting practically the concept and ideas of environmentaly sustainable development. • In the mentioned components the environment found its modest place in the segment of demand conditions, although,it is not quite clear why, in the form of the expression „stringency of environmental regulation“, it is placed in that particular segment. • Natural resources are even in the worse position. Among the factors having influence on the business competitiveness natural resources were not even mentioned. Porter treats them simply as an assumption, as something that is out of the question and always readily available. • In the Report (p. 21) Porter said: „Companies in a nation must upgrade their ways of competition if successful economic development is to occur. Broadly, companies must shift from competing on inherent endowments (comparative advantages such as low-cost labor or natural resources) to competing on competitive advantages arising form efficient and distinctive products and process“. • And further (p. 23): “National endowments such as natural resources play a declining role in competitiveness as the resource intensity of the economy fails and as technology substitutes for resources of opens up new resource locations. ... It is the productivity with which natural resources can be utilized, not the resources themselves, that normally have the strongest influence on prosperity. • Finally, Porter concludes (p. 44): „Countries with lower levels of productivity are more dependent on natural resources export“. • This way, Porter, clearly recognizes and admits the role that natural resources have as a mean of competitive battle on the world market. • It is entirely different matter how we see them in that role – as more or less valuable, as efficient or inefficient, as desirable or less desirable. • It is more than obvious, that natural resources have been and still are, for the large number of countries, predominant mean in the competitive battle on the world market, • and dominant mean by which they realize their economic growth, but probably not economic development, and surely not sustainable development, envisaged as a complex goal realized through a balanced development simultaneously on the four fields: economic, environmental, social and cultural. • Aaccording to the Report (WEF 2004, p. 44) the countries that lead in the export (measured in the absolute physical amount not as a size relative to their overall export) of minimally processed natural resources are the most developed countries: United States, Canada, Russia, Australia and Norway. • Developed countries, like Japan, who is one of the most important producers of steel despite the fact that it does not possess its own metal ore at all, enormously use natural resources of other countries and to a significant extent base their competitiveness on them. • Exaggerated usage of the common environmental goods – USA currently use 36 % of the atmosphere as a place for disposal of CO2 ,and CFC. • USA has not signed Kyoto agreement. Explanation ? Transnational corporations from the most developed countries, in spite of the most advanced technology in their possession, constantly search locations worldwide characterized by comparative advantages in the form of cheap natural resources and labor force. • It is another proof supporting the statement that not only low developed countries used natural resources as a basis of their competitiveness but also the most developed countries. • They use their higher productivity simply to achieve larger production and easier distribution of their products all over the world. • Hence, not to include natural resources in any way as a factor in the process of calculation of competitiveness index (justifying their exclusion by the statement that natural resources represent the gift of God and not the result of the conscious efforts), simply does not have real justification. • We think, that globalization, which supports previously mentioned patterns of behavior represents the best way to practically keep alive otherwise unsustainable competitive advantages. • It is even worse, they are constantly recommended as a desirable model of behavior. • But the Index known as the Ecological Footprint clearly and unambiguously point to that fact and stress the unsustainability of such a practice of economic growth of developed countries and the world as a whole. • If we combine, with proper weights, ESI and GCI into our proposed new synthetic index designated as Sustainable Development Competitiveness Index (SDCI), we would get completelly different and more realistic picture and ranking of particular countries. • Competitivenss is not the goal for itself. It is supposed to lead to economic development, which is supposed by itself to leave to better life and increased overall welfare of the citizens of particular countries, and not to the increase of only one component – material consumption. • If the idea of the sustainable development is really accepted, and not only formally, we are convinced that only one such synthetic indicator as Sustainable Development Competitiveness Indexs would be a much better indicator of the long–run success of a national economy. Porter again • Stating that technology replace natural resources Porter evidently declare himself as a technological optimist who believes that technology alone can resolve all the problems and insure desirable continuous economic growth at the high rates. Relative decoupling – recomended sollution • In the Report relative decoupling has been presented as a universal and sufficient sollution to numerous problems relating to environment and natural resources overexploitation. Need fr absolute decoupling • On the contrary, our opinion is that absolute decoupling is what is realy needed if the mentioned problems are to be resolved in the long run. The emphasis is on the long run. Since absolute decoupling has been very rearly accomplished, emphasis of achievement of only relative decoupling is counterproductive and even dangerous. • WHY? BECAUSE: Saying that the relative decoupling is the final solution to environmental and natural resources problems leeds to the situtation in which incentives for further efforts aiming at absolute decrease of quatity of limited resources used do not exist or are discouraged. • Achievement of reduction of environmental impacts requires an absolute decoupling of environmental impacts from economic growth. • Relative decoupling tends to mean just resource efficiency, and resource efficiency measures alone will not deliver the objective of ensuring that “the consumption of renewable and non-renewable resources does not exceed the carrying capacity of the environment.” • Relative decoupling would not lead to reductions in environmental impacts, merely a slowing down of the increase in environmental impacts. • To achieve absolute decoupling between environmental impacts and economic growth, an overall reduction in resource use will be required, and ... ... significant changes are requested in the field of consumption and distribution of income, not only in the field of extraction and manufacturing. Action, action, action .... Changes, changes, changes .....