Chapter 23: Ecological Economics23.1 Economic WorldviewsFreedom and GrowthThe Laffer Curve23.2 Population, Technology, And Scarcity23.3 Natural Resource Accounting23.4 Market Mechanisms Can Reduce Pollution23.5 Trade, Development, and Jobs23.6 Green BusinessChapter 23: Ecological Economics23.1 Economic Worldviews•Can development be sustainable?•Our definitions of resources shape how we use them •Classical economics examines supply and demand •Neoclassical economics emphasizes growth•Ecological economics incorporates principles of ecology•Communal property resources are a classic problem in ecological economicsFreedom and Growth•1200-1500 Growth in European internal markets•1500-1900 Territorial Expansion•1700-2000 Scientific and Technological Expansion•Everyone gets a Bigger Slice•Can Freedom Exist in a Zero-Sum World?The Laffer Curve23.2 Population, Technology, And Scarcity•Scarcity can lead to innovation•Carrying capacity is not necessarily fixed•Economic models compare growth scenarios•Why not conserve resources?23.3 Natural Resource Accounting•Gross National (Domestic) product is our dominant growth measure •Alternate measures account for well-being•New approaches incorporate nonmarket values–Nonmarket values can’t be spent in the marketplace•Cost-benefit analysis aims to optimize resource use23.4 Market Mechanisms Can Reduce Pollution•Using market forces •Is emissions trading the answer? •Sulfur trading offers a good model •Carbon trading is already at work23.5 Trade, Development, and Jobs•International trade brings benefits but also intensifies inequities–NAFTA•Aid often doesn’t help the people who need it–Theft, Misappropriation–Inefficiency and Bureaucracy–Ethnic, Religious and Class Rivalry •Microlending helps the poorest of the poor23.6 Green Business•New business models follow concepts of ecology •Efficiency starts with design of products and processes •Green consumerism gives the public a voice •Environmental protection creates jobs •Personally Responsible
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