Those of us
who believe that the economy should serve us instead of the other way around
are conflicted. We know that the only way to end unemployment at home and
poverty around the world is to make the economy grow faster. But we also know
that nothing can grow forever, that the faster the global economy grows, the
sooner we will run out of essential resources, including fossil fuels, water,
arable land, healthy ecosystems and a moderate climate.
Economists
and politicians cannot admit it, but the laws of physics apply, no matter what
the latest polls tell us. The Earth has finite resources that will someday limit
our economic growth.
The Earth
cannot forever support billions of people. And yet we have staked our future -
individually, nationally, and maybe even as a species - on that impossible
dream.
Some people
are in denial. They believe that the Earth’s resources are limitless and that a
beanstalk can grow to the sky. Or perhaps they know deep in their heart that we
are on the road to an environmental and economic catastrophe, one that they
think they alone will survive through wits, gold, and guns.
Others
believe fervently that technology will bail us out yet again, that clever
primates will always find a new tool that will help us extract ever more stuff
from the planet. They laugh at the warnings of Rev. Thomas Robert Malthus, who
warned in the 19th century that the population would inevitably outgrow the
food supply, leading to periodic mass death due to wars, famines and plagues.
Malthus was
wrong, of course...so far. Improvements in agriculture, finance, government,
manufacturing and transportation kept pace with the population growth. Even
with the population about seven times greater than in Malthus’s time, the
percentage of the human race that is truly poverty-stricken has fallen. On
average, we live longer and better lives than our ancestors did. More people
have enough to eat, clean water to drink, a secure shelter and basic
healthcare.
Precarious poor
But the
position of those poor billions in Asia, Africa, Latin America and even in
America is precarious. The global recession hurt the poor and the nearly poor
the hardest.
The only
working model of growth the developing world knows is to export more stuff to
the rich countries. It turns out that the best way we have found to reduce
poverty in Asia is for the rich in North America and Europe to consume more.
It is the
ultimate trickle-down economics. It takes ever-increasing consumption by those
in the developed world to keep the hands of the developing world busy and their
bellies full. They have outsourced the production but not the consumption.
But because
they have outsourced productive jobs, many of them in the developed world
cannot afford to increase their consumption. The answer? More debt to pay for
more stuff to keep the economy growing.
Debt is
merely a claim on tomorrow’s real wealth - actual productive assets and actual
goods and services. Unfortunately, paper wealth (debt) has grown faster than
real wealth.
Money cannot buy love.
Everyone
knows money cannot buy happiness but we run our economy as if it does. Although
it is plainly true that we do need to eat to survive, our well-being cannot be
accurately measured by the sum of what we produce and consume.
A few
economists have rejected the premise that the economy must grow forever. In
Britain, the New Economics Foundation has created a Happy Planet Index as an
alternative to the traditional measures of economic progress that focus on only
growth, not on well-being or sustainability.
According to the Happy Planet Index, people who live in the richest countries are not any happier than those who consume less of our dwindling resources. A certain level of economic development is essential to our well-being but our quality of life is also determined by how free we are politically; how equal we are socially and by the opportunities we have to be creative or to live in a loving community.
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