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Working Paper Series WAITE MFIVIOPIAL .BOOK . COtlFCTION , APPL1ED• EcoNc.irorcs. • vr t.OF DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS BERKELEY CALIFORNIA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION University ofCalifornia WI, ;\ , 4 Division of Agricultural Sciences UNIVERSITY OF)CALIFORNIA 7,R 7f 6-7 4/31/5.5 o3 til Working Paper No. 203 QUi. RESOURCE ECONOMICS .AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS: SYNHIESIS OR REFORMULATION? by Richard B. Norgaard California Agricultural Experiment Station Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics September. 1982 t1 RESOURCE ECONOMICS AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS: SYNTHESIS OR REFORMULATION? by Richa-d B. Norgaard Associate Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics University of California, Berkeley First Draft, tla'y. 30., 1982 , Minor Corrections and Modifications, June 7, 1982 Comments by Richard Bishop and Daniel Bromley Incorporated September 24, 1982 A Working Paper prepared for the Lecture Series on Resource Economics and Development Economics Department of Agricultural Economics University of Wisconsin, Madison presented June 1 2 1982 RESOURCE ECONOMICS AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS: SYNTHESIS OR REFORMULATION? I. INTRODUCTION. Over --.,- the past several decades resource economics velopment economics have acquired their own theoretical ties become well defined subdisciplines and Practicing have within and identi- economics. economists in both developing and developed countrieE. been formulating prescriptions- based on in.s:ights- from subdiscipline's body of theory. for which it has been prepared, This paper, like the each workshop addresses whether better theory, subsequently better prescriptions, and de- might be possible if we could somehow formally link the two subdisciplines.:] My own thoughts on this issue are clearly rOo ed irs my and in my more recent observations of the attempts to develop the Br zi 1 i an Amazon. While my own background is not easily gener41- ized into clear lessons, possibil.ities the Amazon story is. My views on the of melding resource and development economics have evolved in the following context. Periodically, major, While well most efforts and successful over the pas four centuries, there have been organized attempts to settle the Brazilian of the attempts have entailed capital transfers, on their own terms. substantial none of the efforts Amazon. planning have been The most recent drive to settle the Amazon began with Brazil's colonization project in the early 1970s. The planners major highways, in Brasilia were thorough. connectirg roads, They and feeder roads. planned The' ) ; de- signed a system of major marketing centers, 'medium sized admi.nistrative and service Structures. were mated. tially A method of successful colonists was received the necessary administrative, support at for farmers. were esti- school, agricultural extension, credit, and systems were planned. more and small villages designed and material requirements Health care, marketing towns, the outset. selecting established. political, Based on the extensive poten- The plans arid financial experience of economic development plans throughout the world, the colonization 1. project was foolproof. Nevertheless, it failed Rational because planning failed in the Amazon, it had no roots in the Amazon in my itself. estimation, The objectives were national in scope ranging from "bringing people without land to land without people" to 'harvesting the tropical rainforest t repay the national debt. Specific activities were grandiose to stay in the national limelight: the • Transamazon Highway, sufficiently the construction of the implantation of complete.colonies, the conversion of millions of hectares of rainforest to pasture. The activities were carried out directly by existing government agencies or encouraged by subsidizing capital. The objectives a description of the plans and their failure see Moran 1. For (1982) and Smith (1981,1982). The colonization planning process Development properly addressed all of the issues raised in Planning: Lessons of Experience (Waterston, 1965) which was based on seven years of World Bank experience in fifty-flve countries. filled the national political and economic needs of the time, the • scale and types of activities bolstered the national ego, and the authori- -fit the national system of mixed bureaucratic approach tarianism and state cpaitalism. The objectives, activities, and approach had no roots in the social and ecological systems of the Amazon itself. conventional we develop the Amazon well were prepared by theory economic development standards based on the have to date. Their execution was sincere and vigorous inibut they proved incongrous with the particular social and ecological sys- The .plans might well have worked elsewhere, tially. tems in the Amazon on which it was imposed. were never planners the • to plans The asked because * tages s the because did not have appropriate theory with which to identify Colonists soon .learned that planting monocul- questions. tures in the initial planning The right questions rice for the market was risky 4 and both unproductive appropriate agricultural systems had not been developed for upland rice in the Amazon ecosystem and because the Braz bureaucracy inputs, could not maintain the provision of credit, extension a vice, and storage and transport services .for markets effectively as incongruities and failure became apparent. soil degradation, a hastening of the slash and burn social hardship ensued. Rapid . cycle, and Some ccii oni StE. learned to practice mixed crop subsistence agriculture combined with hunting and gathering, li-fe style settlement proven by Indians and the attempts. Other survivors of earlier colonists abandoned their land moved to the large Amazon towns. Some of the initial and colonists and a few subsequent settlers managed to succeed, farming perennial crops. directly effective, settlements ment Though the imposed bureaucracy was government expenditures bolstered the in multiplicative ways and the retraction of govern- services compounded the hardships short, In failure. dIr more Much of the planned colonization infra-- structure -tructure has been abandoned. not ,1 less, of primary production the social and ecologicl systems rejected the imposition of the development plans (Norgaard, 1981a). Two things impress me about the Amazon story. First, though the plans were fool proof a pmjaci l any number of economic explanations their of failure suffice Ex p.osi. Failure explained from an agricultural credit perspective, perspective, capital perspective, or from a be human from a • marketing But each of these foci were looked at in detail In perspective. process planning the from a from an environmental perspective, economics production can so the error must be another at level Correcting the problems identified ax . pmsi by any one or combinawould not necessarily lead to success tion of the per a . subsequent process the attempt. was pervasive, social the planning ricit simply a forgotten factor. Second, Whatever was remiss in and ecological trans-format ions associated failure of the plAns were rapid and easily the Amazon it . is important interacting identified. is one of the more blatant story to Understand societies dynamic systems. Neither with and examples the Indeed, f how environments as economics or- resource development economics has had this emphasis nor would a synthesis of the two as we know them today repair this deficiency. For L, 1% these reasons, I have been working on a reformulati'on. II. COEVOLUTIONARY AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT. The papers coevolutionary framework developed in my The perspective focuses on how agricultural activities modify the ecosystem and ecosystem's responses provide cause for action and social organization. vides earlier emphasizes the interactions between social and ecological systems (Norgaard, 1281a; 1981b). man's two subsequent how the individual .The concept of coevolution pro- a new entree for linking economic and ecological thinking. Coevolution in ecology refers to an evolutionary process based on reciprocal responses (Ehrlich and Raven, of the which between 1964; two closel interacting Baker and Hurd, 1968Y. beaks of hummingbirds and the shape of they flowering species The evolution the -flowers on feed . the behavior of bees and the distribution. ,of plants, and the biochemical defenses of immunity of their insect prey have all been given plants and coevolutionary explanations, as reciprocal processes between two evolving systems. Agricultural development can be viewed as a coevolutionary process between a sociosystem and an ecosystem that, for by design, 2. benefit man or benefits man. Coevolutionary feedback need not The social and ecological degradation following 2. Numerous critics have encouraged me to explain what 1 mean by "benefits man" and "development". This is, of course, a central issue in economics. Basically, I am willing to accept existinct the attempts at colonization in the Amazon was a process. coevolutionary The terms, to coevolve, coevolution, and coevolutionary process are value free and merely refer to the reciprocal process of change. The term coevolutionary development is used to refer to coevolution that benefits man. Sociosystems .and ecosystems are maintained through numerous feedback mechanisms. changed. . systems Change occurs when these With coevolutionary development, feedbacks are maintenance feedback frequently shift from the ecosystem to the sociosystem. The history of paddy rice culture in Asia provides an interesting ex WTI p Increased productivity under paddy technology has been achieved through investments in dikes, facilities and terraces, and through the management of water for weed nut!..ient retention. At the same _time, paddy necessitated more socially demanding property, and and irrigation control technology water management., labor exchange institutions to maintain the paddy rice system Belserup, in its 1965). more productive state for man (Geer tz , eco• 1963; Thus, contrary to the view of growth as a pro- cess of overcoming environmental constraints, the coevolutionary perspective emphasizes an increasingly important, and frequently more complex, interaction between man and his environment. The assumes importance of the idea that the sociosystem the complementary activities and regulatory frequently -functions definitions in economics, the will of whoever wills development objectives in a country, or some more Idealistic definition, for am primarily concerned here with the possibilities of different objectives and the process of reaching objectives. Thus, I beg my readers to allow me to leave these terms as undefined as they are generally in the development literature. V. were which either previoUsly endogenous to the or ecosystem maintained by the individual farmer cannot be overstressed. Odum (1969) characterizes agricultural development as a. transformation . to reduced numbers of species and usually lower ciency of nutrient recycling, production, tions. own and disturbs occurs .e'ff higher but less stable ratesof ocks relative to natural condi- As.man pushes an ecosystem in this direction to suit his needs, viousiy low biomass combined he intervenes some of the equilibriating mechanisas which evolved faster *compensates in -some .of the nutrient in the ecosystem. Co6volutionary or is perhaps only possible for if these natural system losses. functions may entail, cycles -.and • had pre-. development the sociosystem New sociosystem for example, fertilizing o. the management of legumes to replace lost nutrient cycles, weed ';iller to offset natural succesion, and insect control to compensate for displaced equilibrating mechanisms. These new sociosystem functions are costs because they involve manual labor, managerial effort, knowledge acquisi tion, the use of natural resources, lishment and maintenance of institutions. need Ecosystem modification not necessarily entail more sociosystem when it does, and the estab-. involvement, but, the costs of these new activities must be deducted from the gross benefits of the new interaction. Western agricultura lutionary process. culture, near development can be described as a coevo- A once small scale, , labor intensive, poly- subsistence interaction with the ecosystem co- evolved to a large scale, mechanized and energy intensive commercial farming interaction. This new inter-action is maintained by a highly complex system of impl emerit and agrochemical industries, a highly developed marketing system, and gcivernment institutions to generate and disseminate knowledge, late markets, absorb risk, subsidize capital tional impacts public health externalities. evolved, in responses brought of adjustments, part, to man's increasing ecological and water While returns to scale with environmental the and •••• ecosystem monocultural systems mechanization, encouraged the development and their use of •• and of risk spreading responses distribu- The various scicicisystem elements activities. ••• ecosystem and control limit in reaction to the nature of instability agrochemicals develop new inputs, regu- institutions. Similarily, to agrochemicals have led to new pesticide pollution regulatory institutions as well as research programs in agricultural experiment stations. to new Equally important, the institutional responses typically encouraged fur3. ther changes in similar directions Crop insurance and regu. 1ated markets, for example, reduce the risks of moncultural production and make it even more attractive. tural systems have soil features, interactions much the which Today's agricul- weed dynamics, and -insect-crop reflect coevolution with the social system same as today's agricultural institutions reflect the 3. Coevolution is a positive feedback process. Numerous readers of my previous papers assumed that I did not understand cybernetics since positive feedback processes can explode or collapse. In economics the emphasis is almost always on the importance of negative feedback processes in attaining stable equilibriums. While the concept of equilibrium has been very productive in economics, on-going change is the essence of economic history and the goal of economic development. vulnerability dynamic and of disturbed soil to wind and water adaptations of in populations t erosion, chemical control, the susceptibility of monocultural systems to variations •• lweather. • the in EPISTEMOLOGY AND PROGRESS IN ECONOMICS. III. of the old and what hypotheses might be tested to see Since we are comparing the new the new model "stands up". model relative to existing theory, different asked to our response with respect models is invariably that the different models are not Furthermore, the perpetrator of a new perspective improvements. is out, then we immediately ask whether the new model is an improved expansion how econo- Ne seem to be perfectly willing to hear other views mics. but a curious resistance to new models within is There document every interpretation of to which event an In theory. conflicts with an interpretation based on existing addition, different models are dismissed as unscientific because In this testable hypotheses are frequently not readily apparent. section, I argue that this standard reaction is epi stemologically naive and make a plea for theoretical plural i sm.' Until recently, our understanding of the growth of knowledge was based on Bacon's argument for the testing of largely hypo- Cr theses and an idealized history of the progress of the -.cience Karl physics. was (1934,1959) Popper - Logic of Scientific to the standard work on the method According decades. The to Popper, Discovery truth objective knowledge grows by of repeated empirical testing of hypotheses. expands continuously as models encompassed more and more. of the process is consistent with view mathematical proof that any complete and consistent a KnowledQe process Popperian for This Godel's 1921 model con- expanding the tains unprovable propositions that can be proved by model, which in turn leaves new prcposi tions unprovable (see ,‘ Nag e and Newman, 1958; Hofstadter, 1979). Kuhn (1962) docu- the transition from one "paradigm" to the was mented how rarely smooth but reinforced . Popper by retaining the perspective next that the adoption of new paradigms ultimately came through testing thesis Most Given this perspective, our reaction to new models If this is how science progresses, logical. • inquire and that new paradigms clearly dominated old. economists today seem to retain this view of the growth of knowledge. is hypo- then we should whether the new is more comprehensive than the old arid -what hypotheses might be tested to see whether the model "stands up". There is ample evidence that economists have been borrowing epi temology and our perception of scientific progress from sics. phy- My favorite example is the concludirg paragraph to Morgen- stern's otherwise humble and pragmatic work, On The Accuracy f Economic Observations (1950, pp.205-6): • Eventually a new generation of economists will have learned to live with data of widely differing quality to improve their observations. In that and how they will emulate the physicists who have created a magnificent and • terrifying theory though their data range in accuracy from better than 1/100,000,000 to only 50% In appreciating that is when they can measure at all. the true condition of the data, economists cannot fail the but to develop economic theory in conformity with physical standards set sciences. scientific in the high . We do not, however, subject "accepted" economic theory • to the same tests that our conventional epistemology dictate . results of The econometric - studies are treated as knowledge. •.rather than as hypotheses needing further testing. relationships fail When to hold up in later.years, our econometric we. unabashedly. 'do an about-face and admit that our models were not complete enough to encompass all of the factors that might have changed. the subdiscipline of resource economics, Within hun- we must have one dred variations of Hotelling's model showing how the royalty of a stock resource rises with the rate of interest for every observation of the same. The inconsistencies between our epistemolooy - between our empahsis on mathematical formali- and our behavior and the our high statist cal s andards for measurement, zation, we hypotheses actually test - reflect an adolescent "ph>'si cs envy" that has developed into an unhealthy adulthood obsession. Fortunately, mology there have been some reformu 1 ations in e p iste- since Popper's earlier work which in my estimation nicely remedy our problem. (19'74) has First, Feyerabend in Against Method shown that the physical sciences did not advance following the "scientific method" and that theories were ted long before hypotheses had been adequately tested. further that: by following by accep- He aroues (1> science can only repeat itself but not advance the "scientific method" since the method provisions for incorporating anything new, be quite (2) theories has no cannot empirically tested in part because measurement and theory are I nextricably entertwined, (3) theories can only be compared with other theories, and (4) no theory should be eliminated since even theories which are clearly dominated by other theories -such as Ptolemy's theory of the solar system -should not be rejected -for they may prove adequate for some purposes and easier to use. No doubt, so much blasphemy in so few words must be defended vigor- ously, but I cannot compete with Feyerabend's vigor and can onl I .1 -encourage you to read his book. His subsequent work, Science in a Free Society (1978>, is more positive in that it presents his own epistemology of scientific pluralism. Interestingly, this is largely based on the political philosophy of John Stuart Mill (On Liberty, 1859). Oddly, epistemology We sense. not so, controversial or perhaps is consistent with ordinary knowledge Feyerabend's discoveriPs readily acknowledge that most scientific circum- are accidental in nature -or due to special environmental stances. We accept And use conflicting theories all of the time. The sciences of physics, are inconsistent. chemistry, and biology use models which If they were not, Consistent -science. or program flies we would have one universal judgement . by "integrating" The space or intuition. knowledge views could f the world. many from incon- fields which was generated from separate and occasionally sistent them we still manage to combine not, .through ordinary knowledge, shuttle common and And the shuttle flights to dat probably have been planned as effectively, ( and maybe in essence were ) with a Ptolemic view of the solar s •C . em. as wi th a Copernican. The acceptance of diverse writings of earlier philosophers. theories can be seen in the Leibniz, for example, wrote: To multiply exclusively Wisdom requires variety. thing, however noble it be, would be a .the same superfluity; it would be a kind of poverty. Theodicee 124. Nor have the *advantages of maintaining a position of completely pluralism been scientific methodology. the argued sity on literature the from Since this paper is being presented at University of Wisconsin, Chamberlain, missing theoretical C. T. that it is apropo to note Wisconsin geologist and president of the -Unive a persuasively for "The Method Working Multiple of Hypotheses" in 1890. If models cannot tant issues open when it comes to prescription. be impor- philosophy of theoretical pluralism leaves some The rejected scientifically, models conflict? how do we formal when prescribe episAgain, fortunately, there have been other Infor- dilemma. temological developments that help us out of the mal is knowledge in ar-22/.. - theories ledge Wilden (1972), of (1978). Lorenz (1972, nary. or and 1977), krow.-,. • Bronowski These latter philosopher-scientists argue that we have processors than more sophisticated sensors and evolved far earlier phi1osphers of science had thought. simply ,f of work the much better standing since: rasa computers for which we tabla for the development of software. not Our minds are must rely on science A great deal of software evol- or in our culture. He ved over millenia and is encoded in our DNA ed should not ignore the benefits of these evolv formal knowledge seems cially when though independent Laudan (1977) simply by to espe- Consistent, conflict. of the evolutionary view, are willing to judge the talents, Ziman (1968) validity of knowledge use. its usefulness and its general acceptance for ent. some extent, Friedman (1953) made a similar argum and To of the implications of this philosphical shift, Many cially with respect to prescriptive authority, espe- for economics and planning are documented by Lindblom and Cohen in Usable Knowledge (1979). prevent They argue that complexity and change in social systems the development of universal laws such as been have developed .n the physical sciences that are needed for authoritative prescriptions to social problems. They argue that the best the social scientist can do is to complement ordinary knowledge, devise new frameworks within which ordinary knowledge might evolve, and identify possible options that may be missed by ordinary knowledge. Social advance, in their view, largely comes from advances in the ordinary knowledge that is perceived directly by many. the arguments presented by biologist David Ehrenfeld .n plements The Arrogance belief com- and Cohen's perspective as social sc i eriti sts Lindblom that rational of Humanism (1978) that the man can improve his condition through planning has proven unfounded and Nestern predominant and science arrogant. Humanism reached a peak in the 1960s with the implementation of. social and economic countries. planning institutions in the West and in The failure of these institutions led, the social and academic despair of the 1970s (Bauer, third world in part, 1971; to Bell and Kristol, 1981; Webber, 1978) Economics has been one of the most important components and beneficiaries of Humanism. economists today, The less comfortable position of the decline of Humanism, alternatives to rational planning of and the search for on both the pol itical 1eft and has been a solid response of. constructive self there economics, and the most interest in epistemology since Ludwig von criticism Epistemological Mises' Essay An Robbin's Postulates Problems of Economic of W. Hutchison's The Significance and Basic John of Economic Theory (1938) or perhaps even since Mill's On the Logic of the Moral Sciences interest can be found in Blaug (1980), renewed Lionel (1933).1 Economics on the Nature and Significance and T. Science (1935) Stuart within Fortunately, coincidental. simply not are right This (1843). Hollis Hahn and (1979), Hicks (1979), Hutchison (1977), Latsis (1976) and Machlup in (1978) addition to Lindblom and Cohen. The interest new overly amongst economists in epistemology is still scattered and defensive, but it could coalesce, become more positive, and set new directions. This brief epistemological -foray has taken three directions. I First, argued that economics does not hold have standards methodological of Popperian and epistemology the to up hence eithe'r our belief in the unique validity of economic theory or in Popperian epistemology sistent. Second, must be rejected if we are to con- be I have argued for theoretical pluralism, utilizing existing, throwing out the Popperian methodology and accepted economic theory al ono with other theories that seem provide useful, information. to call to contradictory, - Third, I have argued that informal knowledge, ordi- nary knowledge, want even if occassionally seemingly for conventional wisdom, common sense or whatever we it must be given formal recognition even if it cannot be formally integrated with formal (scientific, objective, 16-, etc. knowledge. It is in this context that I ask my readers to consider the coevo utionary economic development paradigm. SOME OBSERVATIONS FROM THE COEVOLUTIONARY VANTAGE. IV. The sion, advantage of theoretical pluralism is the added dimen- the depth of perception, obtainable through looking at the world from two or more mountain tops. neoclassical here, and vantage,- we We are accustomed to have built our theoretical fortress we tend to think the real world is as we see it this position. the from From a coevolutionary vantage, however, the world looks quite different. while others have Some features can be seen more receded to the far horizon. closely Looking back toward the neoclass cal mountaintop, _ the heretofore hidden beck- sides Looking anew, of features come into view. I see the world differently in three important ways. SYSTEMS HAVE POTENTIAL. The neoclassical divides the world into components such as land, tal. labor, and capi- Economic growth *comes froni an expansion of these components through births, new discoveries, investment, which redefines and augments the components. mics perspective has resource traditionally economics focused on how resources and technology. Development econo- capital has emphasized the roles or new knowledge of expands stock natural From the coevolut onary vantage, ponents are vague but connections are clear. while com- Man can augment the is in the social and ecological systems which posi- feedback loops, influence and diminish those feedbacks tively negatively which fit man. Conversely, man irfluence the levels of things which bene can ment of uence and augdiminish those feedbacks which positively infl levels uence the the feedback signals which negatively infl things which .are detrimental to man and thereby improve his condition. last century with the introduction of the Until agricultural development was just this sort and chemical inputs, of system adjustirg process. deliberately significantly and learning, the _way years, Man, more than any other species, disturbed environment. his trial ngly through natural selection and later increasi Through error, and machinery by in these relationships largely changed In the early entailed niche ms. in which they interact with ecosyste changes expansion individual men and societies have out -competing similar species in the food chain. e agricultural practices, man Later, through increasingly effectiv the livestock ) moved down ( in some cases through domesticated food chain, way and transdisplacing numerous species along the -forming the chain. soil -plant relationships farther down changes ess of occurred over centuries through a proc and ecological reactions and responses between social These reciprocal 4. ems syst to be the exclusive, corNote that this view is not thought 4. with theoretical pluralitm, it rect, or complete one. Consistent one seen most clearly from the should be considered merely as the because it contrasts with coevolutionary vantage. It is valuable of this period economic views (or absence thereof) conventional of our economic history. I • the first use of tool c. with which the environment could be Since readily manipulated to the significant introduction of more of stock resources in agriculture about a century use population * human • occurred doubled more than eight capturing by times. the ago, These the potential of the . systems.. the gains It has doubled less than twice since the transformation in agriculture a ago, 5. dramatically . century The and though the rate of doubling has increased coevolutionary potential that man captured in the might in the future contrasts with the connections past between thermodynamics and economic development drawn by Georgescu-Roegen (1971). Initially, the biological componen t==. or the physical order which man labels as resources. Although one cannot the world did not have deny the universal applicability of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, the possibilities for local entropy decreases incredible economic must be admitted. Georgescu-Roegen acknowledges energy and long life of the sun and its importance to well-being over the long run. logical processes and evolution, the perceived processes, the His references . to however, tend to be limited t directionality or irreversibility phenomena he as bio- of with the Second biological Law'. Nhat Georgescu-Roegen does not fully acknowledge is that man could not • 5. These calculations are based on a world population of about 5 million when agriculture began some 5,060 to 10,000 years ago, a population of about 1.6 million in 1880, and a pc*ulation of 4.5 The numbers and dates are approximate, based on billion now. Other numbers will still confirm the point that Grigg (1974). there were more doublings by coevolutionary development than by "resource exploitive". development. existed on the earth four and one-half billion [lave years life began to evolve an order -- through the use of solar before energy -- that had low entropy for man. the plant and animal life we eat, The oxygen we breathe, and the hydrocarbons we tap to fuel our industry are all due to biological processes. order ago, of physical minerals processes has improved for man over- stemming from solar energy and inlOe cooling of the earth ( Blum, Henderson, 1913 ). eons Even the by various the gradual Boulding, 1978 and 1981; and From a perspective limited to man on earth, coevolution . has been a negentropic process. • The two approaches to economic growth, developing through coevolutionary potential and through discovering new technologies for stock resource exploitation, resource growth models, stock modified can perhaps Our might at least in some ways, be to consider the complementarities and the incompatibil- ities between the two approaches. influence coevolution, Stock resources can be used to coevolutionary considerations may lead us tn usg. stock resources more effectively, perspective facing linked. be with might the and the coevolutionary shed some insight on the problems We are evolution of social institutions nuclear power, western coal, and Mideast Oil. now vis vLs These are explored more fully in Norgaard (1981b). EQUILIBRIA, cal EXTERNALITIES, AND PROPERTY RIGHTS. economic theory assumes that ecological and tend toward stable equilibria. Neoclassi- social systems He assume that a steady input of pollutant will shift the ecosystem to a new equilibrium. 20,1--1 Given Tv' the values of the good and bad aspects of this new relative to the old one, are less explicit, . institutions. the .costs we make similar assumption's Though we social about for example, an environmental protection agency social system in a new equilibrium whose •benefits can be measured relative to the old institutional .brium. the we calculate exterilal costs. We tend to assume that a steady political pressure that maintains, puts equilibrium and . equili- For both the ecological and social systems, we argue that tendency toward equilibria is due Without the negative feedbacks, to negative feedbacks. we are concerned that the system will either explode or collapse. From the coevolutionary vantage, feedbacks, continual sight. -- reinforcing, modifications in however, reciprocal signals lucky. But lead t equilibria No doubt the positive feedbacks are typically have 'been minor explosions'and collapses, positive that each system with no doubt they are attenuated by negative feedbacks, been we see weak no doubt in no there and no doubt we hive it is a distinctly different world view that baffles those who can only perceive by equilibria. The concept of and solutions to externalities rough edges when viewed from the coevolutionary there is have vantage. some First the problem that the ecosystem and social system were not in equilibria before and will not attain equilibria after the introduction of an input external to the market. costs must desirability b thought of in terms of the of Thus, external differences two paths the interacting systems 42 might in the take. more and Second, the coevolutionary importantly, perspective It is one predict two erably more uncertainty. suggests that there is consid to predict a new equilibrium and an thing .to Given this uncertainty, paths. evolutionary an impact that is be ative externality may turn out to initially thought to be a neg udback change that induces coevol a positive externali ty or a fee e been inIndeed, historical examples hav tionary development. Boserup (1965) and by in , just this sort of light by terpreted Nilkinson (1972). The respect ghts a third coevolutionary. vantage highli externalities. to activities of through . the one An externality party affect another market. issue occurs directly when rather t Both this conception of and mos of with the than the an ties are set in the context of uctoesi-ed—szilitAi_ons to externali 6unts exchange of separable items acc imaginary world where market ical between people and where ecoloQ for all of the'relationships son's hin the boundaries of each per interactions are confined wit e, separable From the coevolutionary vantag separable property. components, if they do exist, are hidden by a maze .of feedback . lves to man made demarcations loops that do not confine themse ch the market system is based The concept of property on whi nce of separability based on the approximate existe is itself those social Even therein. the strong belief properties or nprivate property, the public age institutions which complement ies of private proassist or correct the deficienc cies which that presume divisibility are divided into separate units to imagine how It is difficult the tasks at hand. perty, of - , ;institutions might have developed if systemic rather than atomistic and equilibria thinkino and evolutionary thinkinci had pre- vailed in Hestern philosophy. PLANNING, LINKAGES ary vantage, thema. that and AND DEVELOPMENT. From the coevolution- macro level planning as we now know it is. an ana- It instigates change based on limited rational knowledge is likely to be inappropriate for the particular ecosystem social system and establishes institutions which are to impede successful coevolutionary development. 1utionary framework of development, planning, hut it takes likely Hithin a coevo- I think there is a role for fai.rly different. form.. is One difference that it would he more of an endogenous process with 6. geographical boundaries than we typically observe smalle • One 'possible • form . would be for. planning Ad.complement process of the "survival of the fittest". If we take the .the view 6. Daniel Bromley, Emery Castle, and Jeff Romm haVe independently noted that much of the uniqueness of the coevolutionary perspective is its emphasis on incAl coevolution as opposed. to global. Certainly, all planning would be endogenous if I was emphasizing global coevolution. Hence, I need to be more specific. about the geographical boundaries of the local systems I think have coevolutionary potential. I do not have a unique answer to this problem as posed. I think in terms of systemic heirarchies with different geographical bounds, or at least fuzzy edges. The coevolutionary perspective gives more at to the more geographically concentrated heirarchies while the neoclassical perspective seems to perceive one global system to the extent that it perceives systems at all. Accepting theoretical pluralism allows us to see these two perspectives as different extremes in this sense without having to artificially draw boundaries indicating where one view stops and the other begins.. that fit nature is constantly randomly experimenting and that then for development planning this suggests survives, se might induce an per experimenting Furthermore, • and error. evolutionary that of process however, may take years to determine by trial Fitness change. which fitness, other things being the same, may not coincide with planning objectives. Coevolutionary devel- opment planning would thus have several aspects within the survi- the increase of experiments and to number select again. the and a dubious experiment may be tried again Planners may be able to develop a system of learning from that past system experiments In both natural which may h ave a greater liklihood of survival. and social systems, t The development budget could be used val mechanism analogy. will aid in selecting of of learning could also take on the task successful 4 adoption experiments and the same This experiments. accelerating the of rejection unsuccessful. will no doubt point out that both the Critics conventional and the proposed coevolutionary approach to planning entail Use of the The difference is that in • approach there is a presumption that largely exo- formal decision making. conventional genously formal For approach. largely the knowledge can coevolutionary endogenously derived be used to planning, formal select I am knowledge proper the proposing be that used in set of to experiments by eliminating approaches that are less likely be conjunction with ordinary knowledge to select a large appropriate. 2141, More and stronger linkages are a common ingredient to prescriptions for development. Those on the political right call . for more exchange and capital transfers through on markets. the left call for more communication and *cooperative through many regional and worldwide international agencies. Those efforts Amongst "rationalists-functionalists" there is only a debate aver which types of interconnections are most appropriate. From a coevolutionary vantage, it is apparent that this debate misses some of the costs shared by all interconnections. "Rational -functionalists" variety of reasons. advocate more linkages for Market linkages capture the gains from trade due to comparative advantage s political linkages provide feedback mechanisms for the realization of common goals, scientific and technical linkages capture the economies of scale of research and development becoming and the dissemination of knowledge. concerned proliferated that the international . While many are linkages that have since World War 11 have high maintenance costs and that the development plans of the international agencies have not proven cost effective, linkages What few are concerned that these additional' may entail costs which work against development pr: might these costs be? Linkages are based on • formal knowledge and their functioning is dependent on the acceptance of this formal knowledge. As in the case of conventional planning discussed above, this formal knowledge may be appropriate for the social and ecological systems within which it was derived but highly unlikely to be appropriate for is being linked. is the developing region that Coupling may slow or halt the evolution of 1 patterns of thinking, indigenous social and economic behavior, It itnd institutions and degrade ecological systems. cerned the loss of existing culture and with I am not con- indigenous tech- 1977) and nologies in the sense presented by Denis Goulet (1971, others, but am concerned with the loss of coevolutionary developmerit potential. Rather than decoupling, one might argue that the appropriate be for planning and linking agencies would policy Indeed, gical systems. just this sort of concern is widespread The response to this concern, though largely for other reasons. has been low because planning and linking organizations have limits. tion, more to the characteristics of particular social and ecolo- sensitive however, be to make activities. Agencies must organize internally, decisions, and informa- seek generally be accountable for their an overall model a rationale, For each of these, that rdi41-1T4-ies Wg-variable, describes relationships, justifies activities, tions which operate worldwide, and - ecological systems, If such Organiza- and rationalizes decisions is necessary. interacting with diverse must still have one overall social rationale. an organization were to truly decentralize so .that it could operate within the context of models appropriate to individual regions we would have the decoupling that 1 am suggesting. To my knowledge, a coevolutionary argument for has not been investigated before. fiCr? _-centralization k 4 a,. V. CONCLUSIONS. and coevolutionary reformulation of resource economics The economics development resources problems this towards provides and reformula ion observed in the Amazon. for a new vantage because of the moved I In development. contradictions Good economic planning there completely Social and ecological coevolution in the Amazon took a -f ailed. van- that was completely unforseen from the neoclassical course This tage. at looking course of events is easily explained irs -from the coevolutionary vantage. retrospect Much of the early agricultural 4 man is also more easily explained in a coevolutionary history framework than in a neoclassical framework. the new Hopefully, will asist us in forseeing errors earlier in the vantage plan- ning process in the :future. course of events in the Amazon was eventual The forseen from Marxist or technical -scientific vantages. of these, that more however, some problems were forseen. From each It seems likely of the problems could have been forseen if the tionary sights the planning process. Thus while I think the vantage that I am espousing in this paper unattainable from other perspectives, views openly from each vantage could have been compared and contrasted during not al Sc. coevolu- provides I have also in- dedi- cated much 6f the paper to justifying the approach of theoretical pluralism. using The advantages and disadvantages and the methods o4 this approach need further development beyond the molgical justification I have provided. epis e- From the coevolutionary vantage we see that .• ecological and social, have potential. not new to the -fields of ecology, systems, both Hhile this observation is sociology, history, or system theory in cleneral, it has not been observed from the neoclassical vantage bedause that vantage is deliberately located to focus components which are only linked through markets. has its "advantages", cilable on Each vantage but the two views in this sense are recon- and clearly you see more from looking out from both of observations from the coevolutionary vantage seem to them. Other blur our neoclassical perception of reality. The opposing em- phases of components in one case and linkages in the other leaves our of understanding of externalities and their solution in a state disrepair. perspective Similarily, the emphasis of the coevolutionary on endogenous interactions between local social and ecological systems suggests that rational planning developed on a more global scale will fail. classical the neither the or the coevolutionary view is clearly right. "truth" necessarily somewhere in another vantage, clear. In these cases, between. neo.- Nor Perhaps is from what is now irreconcilable will become formally In the meantime, the discrepencies are fair warning that prescriptions based on either formal model of reality will likely fail for at least some of the reasons predicted by the other. During have model. to a the past century, institutions in the First large extent been patterned Increasingly, after the World economist's this has also been the case in the Third I 0' Norld. -. •". tionary : vantage, economists. ing the called in adoption of theoretical pluralism and the The will reduce the authority That authority, however, has proved past decade of economic turmoil. of ephemeral durhave been upon most desperately to repair the institutions we have part created, era e growth, ty, amongst others, coevolu- either been rejected we our prescriptions to reduce inflation, accel- reduce trade imbalances, increase economic equali- reduce unemployment, have When improve environmental quality, too frequently failed or mercifully - or not prici. The time is ripe for new etc. so explorations and less trudging on the old trail. BIBLIOGRAPHY Baker, Herbert G. and Hurd, Paul D. 1968. "Inrafloral Ecology. Annual Review of Entomology 13:385-414. 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