Quantitative Eco–nomics How sustainable are our economies? /
Fuzzy vision, anecdotal evidence, media hype and rhetoric characterise the debate of environment and economy. At the same time the cornucopian concept of sustainable development enjoys undiminished popularity. Hardly any publication or proclamation on the environment can resist summoning the paradig...
Κύριος συγγραφέας: | |
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Συγγραφή απο Οργανισμό/Αρχή: | |
Μορφή: | Ηλεκτρονική πηγή Ηλ. βιβλίο |
Γλώσσα: | English |
Έκδοση: |
Dordrecht :
Springer Netherlands,
2008.
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Θέματα: | |
Διαθέσιμο Online: | Full Text via HEAL-Link |
Πίνακας περιεχομένων:
- Part I: Questions, Questions, Questions
- 1. What on Earth is wrong?- 1:1 Paradise lost
- 1:2 Environmental doomsday and international reaction
- 1:3 Reaching the limits?- 2. What’s economics got to do with it?- 2:1 Economics out of sync?- 2:2 Schools of eco-nomic thought
- 2:3 Economic sustainability: maintaining capital and welfare
- 2:4 Ecological sustainability: dematerialisation
- 3. Sustainable development – blueprint or fig Leaf?- 3:1 What is development?- 3:2 Towards an operational definition of sustainable development
- 3:3 Normative economics for sustainable development?- Part II: Assessing the Physical Base of the Economy
- 4. Statistics and indicators
- 4:1 Statistical frameworks
- 4:2 From statistics to indicators ‘for’ sustainable development
- 4:3 Global warming: the indicator ‘of’ (non)sustainable development?- 5. Aggregation: From indicators to indices
- 5:1 Aggregation methods
- 5:2 Indices of environmental sustainability and sustainable development
- 5:3 Critique: towards a ‘balanced’ approach
- 6. Energy and material flow accounting
- 6:1 Rationale: social metabolism and environmental sustainability
- 6:2 Energy accounting
- 6:3 Material flow accounting
- Part III: Greening the Economic Accounts
- 7. Linking the physical and monetary accounts
- 7:1 Measures of economic welfare and wealth
- 7:2 Extending the national accounts: incorporating nature’s assets
- 7:3 Hybrid accounts: expanding the production boundary
- 8. SEEA – the System for Integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting
- 8:1 Pricing the priceless
- 8:2 SEEA objectives, structure and indicators
- 8:3 Case studies
- 8:4 SEEA revision
- 9. Corporate accounting: accounting for accountability
- 9:1 From accountability to accounting
- 9:2 From accounting to management
- Part IV: Analysis – Modelling Sustainability
- 10. Diagnosis: has the economy behaved sustainably?- 10:1 Welfare secured? Dematerialised? Capital maintained?- 10:2 What are the causes? Structural analysis of environmental impact
- 11. Prediction: will economic growth be sustainable?- 11:1 Econometrics: the Environmental Kuznets Curve Hypothesis
- 11:2 Simulation of non-sustainability: the Limits-to-Growth model
- 12. Policy analysis: can we make growth sustainable?- 12:1 Environmental policy measures in general equilibrium and input-output analysis
- 12:2 Environmental constraints and optimality – a linear programming approach
- 12:3 Dynamic analysis: optimality and sustainability of economic growth
- Part V: Strategic Outlook
- 13. Strategies: tackling the limits to growth
- 13:1 Ignoring the limits: muddling through
- 13:2 Complying with limits: curbing economic activity
- 13:3 Pushing the limits: eco-efficiency
- 13:4 Adopting limits: sufficiency, corporate social responsibility, environmental ethics
- 14. Globalisation and global governance
- 14:1 Sustainability effects of globalisation
- 14:2 Global governance for sustainable development
- 15. Questions, questions, questions – and some answers
- 15:1 What’s the problem?- 15:2 What’s economics got to do with it?- 15:3 How bad is it?- 15:4 What can be done?- 15:5 Some non-conclusive answers
- Annexes
- I. Market failure and environmental cost internalisation – a primer
- II. Economic rent and natural resource depletion
- III. SEEA Germany – a pilot case study
- References
- Index
- Colour Plates.