The recent ESA biofuels position reminds us of the need for an ESA policy 
statement on economic growth.  Intensively cropping marginal agricultural lands 
for biofuels is just one of the bad alternatives we get rushed into when the 
fiscal, monetary, and trade policies are set for 3% GDP growth.  As we saw in 
Bali, the preoccupation with growth interfered with well-intended efforts at 
reducing carbon emissions, which amounts to sanctioning the mountaintop coal 
mining in Appalachia and the vast tar sand excavations in Canada, among the 
many other fossil fuel operations nationally and globally.  

Then of course in the background we always have the calls for more nuclear 
power with all the attendant environmental risk.  Growth has really pushed us 
into a corner when nukes are the "green" option!

It would have been an easy and productive step to note the link between our 
national goals of economic growth and the pressure to crop intensively and on 
marginal lands.  Hopefully we can get that linkage into future statements 
pertaining to other destructive energy options.

Meanwhile, with the addition of the Soil Ecology Section chair, we now have 50 
ESA members proposing the position on economic growth... 

--------------------------

Policy Statement on Economic Growth
Proposed for Adoption by the Ecological Society of America on July 12, 2007

Background

Economic growth is an increase in the production and consumption of goods and 
services.  It requires increasing population and/or per capita production and 
consumption.  It is indicated by measures of production, income, and 
expenditure, most notably gross domestic product (GDP).  

Economic growth is a function of land, labor, and capital.  Capital may be real 
or financial.  Real capital includes natural capital, manufactured capital, and 
human capital.  Natural capital may take the form of raw materials (e.g., oil, 
timber, fish) or services (e.g., solar radiation, water filtration, climate 
regulation).  Manufactured capital includes the infrastructure, plant, and 
machinery that are used in the production of consumer goods or additional 
manufactured capital, or in the performance of services.  Human capital refers 
to various aspects of the human condition that allow for higher productivity; 
for example, education, information, and health.  

The economic production process entails the conversion of natural capital into 
manufactured capital (including service facilities) and consumer goods and 
services by the application of labor, manufactured capital, and human capital.  
Some services may be performed with little manufactured capital, but natural 
capital in the form of energy and/or agricultural commodities are nevertheless 
required for such performance.  Essentially, the human economy has a sectoral 
structure that reflects the trophic structure of the ecosystem.  

The ecosystem comprises an economy of nature that is founded upon the 
producers, or plants, which produce their own food in the process of 
photosynthesis.  Among the animals, primary consumers eat plants, secondary 
consumers eat primary consumers, etc.  In some ecosystems more than five 
distinct trophic levels may be identified.  Omnivores consume in more than one 
trophic level, and many species are omnivorous to some extent.  Some species, 
such as pollinators, detritivores, and scavengers, are aptly characterized as 
service providers in the economy of nature.

The human economy is also founded upon producers, most notably the agricultural 
and extractive sectors.  Surplus production in these sectors is what allows for 
the division of labor.  Laborers and other individuals consume products from 
the agricultural sectors for sustenance, and manufacturing sectors transform 
energy and raw materials from the extractive sectors into consumer goods and 
manufactured capital.  Service sectors, such as janitorial, transportation, and 
financial services, are an integral component of the full economy, as with the 
service providers in the economy of nature.

Macroeconomic Policy and the Environment

Of primary concern to the Ecological Society of America is the relationship of 
economic growth to the functional integrity and sustainability of the 
ecosystem, which in turn has implications for the sustainability of the economy 
itself.  The Ecological Society of America is also concerned with the lack of 
public policy dialog on the implications of macroeconomic policy to ecological 
integrity and economic sustainability.  Furthermore, in the limited dialog that 
does occur, there appears to be confusion about limits to economic growth and 
the tradeoffs between economic growth and environmental protection.  The 
Ecological Society of America believes ecologists have a unique conceptual 
toolkit, as a result of their training and research, for helping to build 
understanding and awareness about the ecological effects of economic growth and 
for identifying policy tools conducive to ecological integrity and economic 
sustainability.  To wit, the Ecological Society of America takes th!
 e position that:

- There is a limit to economic growth, based upon the laws of thermodynamics 
and principles of ecology.  The availability of matter and energy are limited 
in accordance with the first law of thermodynamics.  The efficiency with which 
matter and energy may be converted into goods and services is limited in 
accordance with the second law of thermodynamics.  Just as energy and biomass 
is lost in the economy of nature from one trophic level to the next, energy and 
materials are lost in the human economy from one sector to the next.  For 
example, it takes more than 100 kilotons of vegetation to produce 100 kilotons 
of rabbits, and it takes many more kilotons to produce (via rabbits and other 
prey) 100 kilotons of foxes.  This ecological principle is grounded in the 
second law of thermodynamics and is referred to as “ecological efficiency.”  
Likewise, it takes more than 100 kilotons of iron ore to produce 100 kilotons 
of steel, and more yet to produce 100 kilotons of auto chassis.!
   The efficiency with which consumer goods and services are produced from 
natural capital is called “productive efficiency.”

- Assessing the limits to growth at local, regional, and national levels is 
complicated by the prospects for importing labor and capital.  The ultimate 
limit to economic growth on Earth manifests at the global level because all 
labor and capital is accounted for at the global level.

- The human economy grows as an integrated whole.  Although particular 
processes and sectors may wax and wane as a function of technological progress, 
the basic collection of agricultural, extractive, manufacturing, and service 
sectors tend to grow and recede in unison.  Furthermore, there is a limit to 
the proportion of services that comprise the human economy because of the land, 
capital, and consumption requirements of the service providers.  Additionally, 
most services are used by or with other economic sectors such that growth in 
those service sectors requires growth in the other economic sectors.

- Economic growth ultimately requires more agricultural and extractive surplus, 
resulting in the liquidation of natural capital.  Increased productive 
efficiency may allow some economic growth to occur with less environmental 
impact per unit production, but efficiency is limited to less than 100% 
pursuant to the second law of thermodynamics.  

- Regarding the size of an economy, the basic alternative trends are growth, 
recession, and steady state.  Because an economy may neither grow without limit 
nor recede into negative production, only a steady state economy is sustainable 
in the long run.  

- There is a fundamental tradeoff between economic growth and environmental 
protection, where environmental protection refers to the maintenance of 
ecosystem characteristics conducive to human welfare.  These characteristics 
include but are not limited to: purity of air and water, soil productivity; 
naturally occurring biological diversity; capacity to buffer communities from 
natural disasters such as hurricanes, and composition of atmospheric gases 
associated with climates that humans and other species have adapted to and 
evolved with.  This tradeoff is practically irrelevant for economies with 
abundant natural capital and ecological integrity, but becomes more 
policy-relevant as the economy grows, natural capital is liquidated, and 
ecological integrity is compromised.

- Because of the tradeoff between economic growth and environmental protection, 
which is necessary for human welfare including economic sustainability, 
continued economic growth is certain to exceed a socially optimum level.  The 
fact that such a level may be difficult to ascertain precisely, or may 
fluctuate as a matter of natural cycles or events, does not render the concept 
of optimum size less relevant to public policy.  Given an adequate 
understanding of the tradeoff between economic growth and environmental 
protection, most citizens and policy makers will be capable of recognizing if 
an economy is far beyond the socially optimum size.  Moving toward the optimum 
size or an acceptable range of an economy’s size should be a policy goal of the 
polity.

- The economies of some localities, regions, and nations may have already 
surpassed optimum size.  Ecological evidence for this exists in the form of 
water shortages, soil erosion and degradation, high levels of biodiversity 
loss, and lack of wild areas and “green space,” among other things.  Broader 
evidence, including but not limited to ecological parameters, is found by using 
various indicators of human welfare, such as the Index of Sustainable Economic 
Welfare and the Genuine Progress Indicator, which in some nations have been 
declining while GDP has been increasing.  It behooves nations and other 
political units to adopt alternative indices of welfare and monitor them along 
with GDP, attempting to parse out the net effects of economic growth, whether 
beneficial or detrimental.

- In nations for which it is apparent that economic growth has proceeded beyond 
the optimum, in which case the expanding production process may more accurately 
be designated “uneconomic growth,” various policy tools should be carefully and 
gradually applied toward the goal of a more optimally sized economy.  Many of 
these tools already exist, including fiscal, monetary, and trade policies.  
Although these policy tools have most often been used to stimulate growth or 
increase the growth rate, they may instead be used to lower the growth rate or 
stabilize the economy.  Additional policy tools for achieving a stabilized 
(mildly fluctuating) steady state economy may be used to supplement the 
existing policy tools, including cap-and-trade systems in the energy and 
extractive sectors, graduated consumption taxes, and banking reforms that 
entail less debt (and therefore less pressure for economic growth) than the 
current fractional reserve system.

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