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Outline • Economic growth vs. biodiversity conservation • Biodiversity conservation and human welfare • Technological progress • Iron triangle • Steady State Revolution Endangerment Causes Urbanization Agriculture Water diversions (e.g., reservoirs) Recreation, tourism development Pollution Domestic livestock, ranching 247 205 160 148 143 136 Czech et al. 2000. Bioscience 50(7):593-601. Causes (cont.) Mineral, gas, oil extraction Non-native species Harvest Modified fire regimes Road construction/maintenance Industrial development 134 115 101 83 83 81 Czech et al. 2000. Bioscience 50(7):593-601. Economic Growth • an increase in the production and consumption of goods and services • typically expressed in terms of GDP • facilitated by increasing: –population –per capita consumption GDP K Natural capital allocated to economy of nature Time Natural capital allocated to human economy PDF files for these articles available at The Wildlife Society website: www.wildlife.org ESA Listings and GDP 1400 $10 1200 $9 1000 $8 800 $7 600 $6 400 $5 R2 = 98.4 200 0 1973 $4 $3 1980 1990 2001 Carrying Capacity Scenarios K K-selection r-selection Time K and r-selected Species Economic Carrying Capacity K K-selection r-selection Time K and r-selected Economies 1995 1992 1989 1986 1983 1980 1977 1974 1971 1968 1965 1962 1959 1956 1953 1950 1947 1944 1941 1938 1935 1932 1929 American GNP, 1929-1997 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 Biodiversity Conservation and Steady State Economy K To conserve biodiversity ... ...maintain steady state economy below K. Time Biodiverse Goods • • • • • Food Fiber Medicine Genetic stocks Experimental subjects Biodiverse Services • • • • • Atmospheric regulation Water provision and purification Pollination Waste disposal Aesthetic pleasure How important is biodiversity? • Pending paper by Costanza et al. will estimate value of world’s biodiversity at $6 trillion dollars per annum; ~ one sixth GGP • Key component of natural capital • Natural capital the foundation of economic security We Might Ask GGP K Economy of nature Human economy Technological Progress • Vernacular: invention, innovation • Technical: increasing productive efficiency resulting from invention and innovation GDP X natural capital allocable KU KT Natural capital allocated to non-human economy Natural capital allocated to human economy Time X natural capital allocable GDP X/2 conserved Economic growth with technology level 2 KU K2 K1 Economic growth with technology level 1 Time Consider the Sources • Research and development • Corporate profit • Economies of scale K U X/2 natural capital allocable GDP X/2 converted Economic growth with technology level 2 K2 K1 Economic growth with technology level 1 Time The Great Debate: Is There a Limit? • • • • “Yes” Physiocrats Classical economists Ecological economists Ecologists “No” • Neoclassical economists • Corporations • Politicians $ = $ $ The “Information Economy” • What is the information used for? • How does one come to afford the information? And yet we hear: “Some people just don’t get it. There is no conflict between economic growth and environmental protection!” Why do they persist? Goals • Replace national goal of “economic growth” with national goal of steady state economy. • Replace bloating economy with steady state economy. Revolutions • Magnitude of change • Pace of change • “When evolution won’t cut it” • Evolution combined with revolt Steady State Revolution • Academic, social • Peaceable, not pacifistic • Models –abolition of child labor –reduction of smoking Academic Phase • Replacement of neoclassical economic growth theory • Refocusing of curricula • More public outreach Social Phase • “Economic growth” reconstructed as economic bloating • Dollar spent is dollar burned • Castigation of the liquidating class Class Structure of the Steady State Revolution • Liquidating class • Steady state class • Amorphic class Expenditures Consumption Classes Percentile: 80 99 100 Expenditures Consumption Classes Percentile: 80 99 100 Expenditures Consumption Classes Percentile: 80 99 100 Expenditures Consumption Classes Percentile: 80 99 100 Liquidators Amorphs Steady Staters Liquidating Class Amorphic Class Steady State Class Liquidating Class Amorphic Class Steady State Class Economic Rationale • “Trickle-down consumption” • Redistribution of wealth compensates for reduced per capita consumption • Reduction of waste • Leads toward steady state economy Liquidators Ecological Capacity Amorphs Most Steady Staters Some Steady Staters Poverty Line Liquidators Amorphs Ecological Capacity Liquidators Amorphs Most Steady Staters Some Steady Staters Steady Staters Poverty Line Political Rationale • No “everyone revolt against everybody” • Taps into predisposition • Readily identifiable classes Psychological Rationale • Darwin, Veblen, Maslow • Cure for “liquidator syndrome” • Ratcheting effect toward sustainable ideology Maslow’s Hierarchy 1) Food 2) Security 3) Love, affection, reproduction 4) Self-esteem 5) Self-actualization Sociopolitical Rationale • Ideological horse before the public policy cart • Supplementary to policy prescriptions • Replaces politicians, not system Ethics I • Equity (current, intergenerational) • Consistent with religions: Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Islamic, Judaic • “Devil in the details” of castigation • Tolerance overrated Ethics II • “Why do they hate Americans?” – It’s the economy, stupid! – Conspicuous consumption not everything, but major thing • SSR beats violent alternatives • “Speaking truth to power” K Time