Title: Sustainability, Economics, and Equity
1Chapter 20
- Sustainability, Economics, and Equity
Quote of the chapter Leave the world better
than you found it, take no more than you need,
try not to harm life or the environment, and make
amends if you do. Paul Hawken, author of
Natural Capitalism
2Sustainability, Economics, and Equity
- Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
- 1994 US, Canada, and Mexico passed the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAGTA) - Intended to increase trade by reducing
tariffs/other taxes and regulations - Negative consequences
- Industrial pollution
- Poor working conditions
- Discrimination
- Questions of social justice
- Point of story?
3Sustainability
- Sustainability meeting the needs of the present
generation without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs - Newer concept
- Basic needs include
- Well being status of being healthy, happy and
prosperous
4Economics
- Economics examines how humans either as
individuals or as companies allocate scarce
resources in the production, distribution and
consumption of goods and services
5Supply, Demand and the Market
- Most economies are market economies
- Market occurs whenever people engage in trade
- Cost of good is determined by supply and demand
6Supply
- Supply curve (s) - shows how many units that
suppliers of a given product or service are
willing to supply - Factors that influence supply
7Demand
- Demand curve (D) - shows how much of a good
consumers want to buy. - Factors that determine demand -
- Slopes downwards because as the price of the good
rises, the demand declines
8The Law of Supply
- Law of supply when the price of a good rises,
the quantity supplied of that good will rise and
when the price of a good falls, the quantity of
the good supplied will also fall
9The Law of Demand
- Law of demand when the price of good rises, the
quantity demanded falls and when the price falls,
demand rises
10Equilibrium
- When the price of a good comes to an equilibrium
point and the two curves (S and D) intersect on
the graph - At this price, suppliers find it worthwhile to
supply exactly as many of the product as
consumers are willing to buy.
11Externalities
- Externalities - costs/impact of a good or service
on people and the environment not included in the
economic price of that good or service - Ex. costs of using common resources such
12Supply and Demand with Externalities
13Wealth and Productivity
- GDP (gross domestic product) - the value of all
products and services produced in a year in a
given country - Includes 4 types of spending
- Does not reflect externalities such as pollution
- GPI (genuine progress indicator) - attempts to
address this shortcoming
14GPI vs. GDP in US from 1950-2004
15Kuznets Curve
16Microlending
- Practice of loaning small amounts of money to
people who intend to start a small business in
less developed countries
17Terminology
- Natural capital resources of the planet
- Human capital
- Manufactured capital all goods and services
that humans produce - Market failure
- Environmental economics examines the costs and
benefits of various policies and regulations that
seek to regulate or limit air and water pollution
and other causes of environmental degradation - Ecological economics
- Valuation assigning monetary value to
intangible benefits and natural capital
18Systems DiagramsTwo Economic Systems
19Cradle to Cradle System
20Environmental Worldviews
- Important to policies a nation considers and how
it implements them - Anthropocentric - human-centered
- Stewardship
- Biocentric - life-centered
- Variety of positions
- Ecocentric - Earth-centered
- Various forms
21World Agencies
- United Nations (UN)
- United Nations Environment Program (UNEP)
- The World Bank
- The World Health Organization (WHO)
- The United Nations Development Program (UNDP)
22United States Agencies
- The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
- The Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA) - The Department of Energy (DOE)
23Several Approaches to Measuring and Achieving
Sustainability
- Human development index (HDI) combines 3 basic
measures of human status - life expectancy
- knowledge and education
- individual purchasing power
- Human poverty index (HPI) measures 3 things
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-
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24US Policies Overview
25Deterrents and Incentives
- Strategies used by US to protect environment,
promote human safety/welfare and (in some cases)
internalize externalities - Command and control
- Incentive based approach
- Green tax
26Triple Bottom Line
27Two Major Challenges of our Time
- Reducing poverty
- Stewarding the environment (environmental justice)
28Millennium Development Goals(Poverty and
Inequity)
- Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
- Achieve universal primary education
- Promote gender equality and empower women
- Reduce child mortality
- Improve maternal health
- Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases
- Ensure environmental sustainability
- Develop a global partnership for development
- 2013 report http//www.un.org/millenniumgoals/pdf
/report-2013/mdg-report-2013-english.pdf
29Environmental Justice
- Inequitable distribution of pollution and of
environmental degradation with their adverse
effects on humans and ecosystems - People that are of lower incomes and minorities
that have a disproportionate exposure to
environmental hazards - Can they not afford to get away? Or
- Do industries move here because no one will
complain?
30Story of Change
- https//www.youtube.com/watch?voIQdYXCKUv0