Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
BLOG Why We Can't Afford
to Prevent Climate Change
Growth
is unsustainable. Period. A
lot of (even progressive) economists still don't seem to get this. "Of
course the recession will end soon, and we'll be back to 'healthy'
growth again," they say. The only debate seems to be when it will end
and how bad it will get before it does.
Two other things economists don't seem to get:
There are healthy
alternatives to a growth economy.
A steady state economy need not be one of deprivation or struggle.
A growth economy is a
debt economy, and debts always have to be repaid.
Growth is always funded by incurring new debts. Print money and borrow
to grow now, and future generations will have to repay it. Take oil
that took millions to years to form now, and you're stealing from those
future generations, and leaving them the mess that burning it creates.
Convert forest to suburban sprawl and you're incurring a debt to
nature, who always collects on her debts. Man-made landscapes rely on
natural hinterlands to provide them with at least seven essential
resources they need to live: food, water, material for clothing and
shelter, health nutrients, room to breathe, forests that produce
unpolluted air, and recreation -- what we call natural capital.
In 'boom' times, as shown in the top chart below, prices are
inflationary. Don't let the lies of our governments fool you -- compare
the cost of housing, cars, health, recreation, education, or the real
cost of food (taking into account massive agricultural subsidies) or
manufactured goods (taking into account the shoddiness and replacement
cost of the crap on the shelves today) to that in 1970 and you'll see
we've been in an inflationary spiral for decades. Inflation
artificially drives up the price of our homes and investments, giving
us more collateral to borrow against, and more cash to spend on these
assets, driving the prices up further in a vicious "bubble" cycle
(shown in blue). These bubbles produce great profits for corporations
(giving us even more 'valuable' investments to borrow even more
against). They also produce an addiction to debt (for most of us, total
assets have doubled in the last forty years, but that increase has been
totally financed by debt -- net worth hasn't changed at all, so the
'wealth' is all illusory). By producing phony statistics that deny the
inflation in this cycle, governments keep interest rates low, so we can
afford to borrow even more. The result: spiralling debt, more waste and
pollution, and a rapid decline and degradation of our finite, fragile
natural capital. As Daniel Quinn has explained,
the glut of cheap subsidized food also produces the population boom
that has been going on for centuries, further exacerbating the cycle.
The bubbles are, of course, unsustainable, and when they burst you get
a different, but nearly as devastating, vicious cycle shown in the
lower diagram above. Asset prices plummet, we have less to borrow
against and less cash to spend, so the demand for assets falls further
and you have a deflationary spiral (the vicious cycle in blue) -- talk
to anyone in Japan if you think that's any better than an inflationary
spiral. If you have an ongoing population explosion (like that in North
America caused by high immigration), that will mitigate this cycle
somewhat, driving up demand and restarting the bubbles. During this
recession/deflation cycle, there is less waste and pollution, and less
decline in our natural capital, but not by much. It merely decelerates.
And for the poor, unable to pay the debts they incurred when their
collateral was 'worth' much more, the impact is devastating --
foreclosure, bankruptcy, and in many nations, starvation.
This is the boom-and-bust Industrial Growth Economy that has prevailed
and become global over the past two centuries. Its consequences are
massive waste and pollution (and soon disastrous climate change),
excessive population growth (and resultant resource wars), horrific
levels of indebtedness and poverty (as inequity of wealth soars), and
addiction to consumption. It is utterly unsustainable -- the booms and
busts don't cancel out the excesses, but merely perpetuate them.
Because of these vicious cycles and their consequences, we can never
'afford' to deal with the unsustainable problems inherent in the
Industrial Growth Economy -- especially climate change. [The word
'afford' means 'to go forward', and when you're caught in a vicious
cycle there is no 'forward']. In boom times, greater production and
greater population produce more greenhouse gases. In bust times,
there's no money to spend on 'niceties' like pollution control to
reduce greenhouse gases (and in fact in recessions we use cheaper,
dirtier energy, and buy cheaper crap that ends up quickly in landfills
and incinerators). So these 'externalities' (waste, pollution, loss of
natural capital) always
mount, and politicians and corporations do their best to get the public
to ignore them, since they have no solution for them. They're not
accounted for in our measure of profit, wealth or 'net worth'.
The only way out is to abandon the Industrial Growth Economy and shift
to a Steady State Economy. As the chart below describes, such a shift
requires three interventions (shown in square boxes) to bring it about:
laws against living
beyond your means (essentially a prohibition on long-term indebtedness)
laws against waste,
pollution and non-renewable resource use
laws encouraging
smaller families
These interventions could eliminate debt-driven inflation and
consumption, waste and pollution, population growth and the degradation
and loss of natural capital. Instead of the Industrial Growth Economy's
vicious cycles we would have a virtuous cycle of stability in prices,
purchasing and consumption:
Many ecological economists have written about this (notably Herman
Daly, Richard
Douthwaite and Peter
Brown). Prior to modern
civilization's invention of industrial, agricultural, health and
financial technologies we lived in such an economy, without the need
for the three interventions (nature intervened, when necessary to
restore the balance).
The problem is that now, we can't get there from here. Suppose we were
to introduce these three interventions, globally. Here's what would
happen:
To prevent
bankruptcies (resulting from the prohibition on indebtedness) being so
huge as to grind the economy to a total halt, we would have to forgive
unrepayable debts, wipe the slate clean (just as we've done with
struggling nations that have found themselves unable to reduce
indebtedness). The problem is that this would collapse the
already-reeling financial 'services' industry. We would certainly face
a severe economic depression, and the populist answer would almost
assuredly be to resume borrowing, to abandon the Steady State Economy
before it could begin to take hold.
Most big corporations,
being dependent on growth in consumer spending and on leverage
(corporate borrowing beyond their means), would collapse. Unemployment
would soar, and most people have none of the necessary entrepreneurial
skills to make a living for themselves. The likely consequence would be
rioting and an insistence on a return to the Industrial Growth Economy.
Those with wealth and
power (including the major religions) would almost certainly fight a
propaganda war against the three interventions just as many of them did
against the science of climate change. If they weren't successful in
stopping the interventions, they would cash out and hoard all the
assets they'd acquired (stolen from future generations, from struggling
nations, from the poor, and from nature). In this case we'd probably
have an all-out global class war.
A black market for
usurers would emerge to replace legitimate lending. Just as with
prohibition, organized crime would get into money-lending (though some
already characterize most money-lenders as such), and we'd have an
upsurge in violence. You just can't make things illegal if people
really think they want or need them. It doesn't work.
The rewards for
defying the laws against waste, pollution and non-renewable resource
use would almost surely be higher than the risk of and penalties for
prosecution, so waste and pollution and the degradation of loss of
natural capital would quickly resume, illegally. Some struggling
nations have excellent environmental protection laws, but they're
unenforceable -- it's too easy to bribe low-income government officials
to turn a blind eye.
What I'm saying is that these three interventions fly in the face of
human nature, and cannot be effectively implemented. We will inevitably
fall back into the Industrial Growth Economy, which evolved as a result
of human nature and a response to human needs. It reflects (alas rather
sadly) who we are as a species. There is no going back to the garden
once your species has tasted the forbidden fruit, and we've absolutely
gorged on it. It's only natural.
This is why all civilizations crash as a consequence of their excesses.
This is why the ecologist-philosophers who are also students of human
nature (John
Gray, Ronald
Wright, and I suppose Dave
Pollard) see the catastrophic collapse of our now massive and global
civilization as inevitable. It is not in our nature
to live within our means, to limit our numbers voluntarily, or to
conserve for future generations
(especially when we don't appear to have enough to go around for our
current numbers).
The way we are, and always have been, we cannot 'afford' to combat
climate change. Even though the cost of not doing so is extinction.
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