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Published on Thursday, July 7, 2011 by YES! Magazine
Toward a Post-Growth Society
It’s business as usual that’s the utopian fantasy, while creating something 
very new and different is the pragmatic way forward.
by James Gustave Speth
Today, the reigning policy orientation holds that the path to greater 
well-being is to grow and expand the economy. Productivity, profits, the stock 
market, and consumption: all must go continually up. This growth imperative 
trumps all else. It is widely believed that growth is always worth the price 
that must be paid for it—even when it undermines families, jobs, communities, 
the environment, and our sense of place and continuity.
The Limits of Growth

But an expanding body of evidence is now telling us to think again. Economic 
growth may be the world’s secular religion, but for much of the world it is a 
god that is failing—underperforming for billions of the world’s people and, for 
those in affluent societies, now creating more problems than it is solving. The 
never-ending drive to grow the overall U.S. economy hollows out communities and 
the environment; it fuels a ruthless international search for energy and other 
resources; it fails at generating jobs; and it rests on a manufactured 
consumerism that is not meeting the deepest human needs. Americans are 
substituting growth and consumption for dealing with the real issues—for doing 
things that would truly make us and the country better off. Psychologists have 
pointed out, for example, that while economic output per person in the United 
States has risen sharply in recent decades, there has been no increase in life 
satisfaction and levels of distrust and depression have increased substantially.

We need to reinvent the economy, not merely restore it. The roots of our 
environmental and social problems are systemic and thus require 
transformational change. Sustaining people, communities, and nature must 
henceforth be seen as the core goals of economic activity, not hoped for 
byproducts of an economy based on market success, growth for its own sake, and 
modest regulation. That is the paradigm shift we seek.

For the most part, reformers have worked within this current system of 
political economy, but what is needed is transformative change in the system 
itself. The case for immediate action on issues like climate change, job 
creation, and unemployment extension is compelling, but the big environmental 
and social challenges we face will not yield to problem-solving incrementalism. 
Progressives have gone down the path of incremental reform for decades. We have 
learned that it is not enough.

Growing Jobs and Well-Being, Not the Economy

It is time for America to move to a post-growth society where working life, the 
natural environment, our communities and families, and the public sector are no 
longer sacrificed for the sake of mere GDP growth; where the illusory promises 
of ever-more growth no longer provide an excuse for neglecting to deal 
generously with our country’s compelling social needs; and where true citizen 
democracy is no longer held hostage to the growth imperative.

Many of the policies that would help grow the kind of society most of us want 
to live in would actually slow GDP growth. For example, if productivity gains 
are taken as shorter worktime, personal incomes and overall economic growth can 
stabilize while quality of life increases. Juliet Schor points out that workers 
in Europe put in about 300 fewer hours each year than Americans.

Other policies that would point us in the right direction:

greater labor protections, job security, and benefits, including generous 
parental leaves;
guarantees to part-time workers and combining unemployment insurance with 
part-time work during recessions;
restrictions on advertising;
a new design for the twenty-first-century corporation, one that embraces 
rechartering, new ownership patterns, and stakeholder primacy rather than 
shareholder primacy;
incentives for local and locally-owned production and consumption;
strong social and environmental provisions in trade agreements;
rigorous environmental, health and consumer protection, including full 
incorporation of environmental and social costs in prices—for example through 
mandated caps or taxes on emissions and extractions;
greater economic and social equality, with genuinely progressive taxation of 
the rich (including a progressive consumption tax) and greater income support 
for the poor;
heavy spending on neglected public services;
and initiatives to address population growth at home and abroad.
Taken together, these policies would undoubtedly slow GDP growth, but 
well-being and quality of life would improve, and that’s what matters.

Of course, it is clear that even in a post-growth America, many things do 
indeed need to grow: the availability of good jobs; the incomes of the poor and 
working Americans; access to health care and the efficiency of its delivery; 
education, research and training; security against the risks of illness, job 
loss, old age and disability; investment in public infrastructure and in 
environmental protection; the deployment of climate-friendly and other green 
technologies; the restoration of ecosystems and local communities; non-military 
government spending at the expense of military spending; international 
assistance for sustainable, people-centered development for the half of 
humanity that lives in poverty.

Jobs and meaningful work top this list because they are so important and 
unemployment is so devastating. The availability of jobs, the well-being of 
people, and the health of communities should not be forced to await the day 
when overall economic growth might deliver them. It is time to shed the view 
that government mainly provides safety nets and occasional Keynesian stimuli. 
We must insist that government have an affirmative responsibility to ensure 
that those seeking decent paying jobs find them. The surest, and also the most 
cost-effective, way to that end is direct government spending—investments and 
incentives targeted at creating jobs in areas where there is high social 
benefit. Creating new jobs in areas of democratically determined priority is 
certainly better than trying to create jobs by pump priming aggregate economic 
growth, especially in an era when increases in GDP and productivity often don’t 
produce jobs.

Beyond policy change, another hopeful path into a sustainable and just future 
is to seed the landscape with innovative models. One of the most remarkable and 
yet under-noticed things going on in the United States today is the 
proliferation of innovative models of “local living” economies, sustainable 
communities and transition towns, and for-benefit businesses which prioritize 
community and environment over profit and growth. The community-owned Evergreen 
Cooperative in Cleveland is a wonderful case in point. As Gar Alperovitz and 
his colleagues have pointed out, state and federal programs can be crafted to 
support community development and finance corporations, local banks, community 
land trusts, employee and consumer ownership, local currencies and time 
dollars, municipal enterprise, and non-profits in business.

We Won’t Miss Growth

Running parallel to these changes in policy must be a change in national 
values. In particular, it’s time to move beyond our runaway consumerism. There 
are mounting environmental and social costs of American affluence, 
extravagance, and wastefulness. Even our larger homes and lots are too small to 
contain all the stuff we are accumulating. The self-storage industry didn’t 
exist until the early 1970s, but it has grown so rapidly that its floor space 
would now cover an area the size of Manhattan and San Francisco combined. We 
have a disease, affluenza, from which we need a speedy recovery.

The good news is that more and more people sense at some level that there’s a 
great misdirection of life’s energy. We know we’re slighting the things that 
truly make life worthwhile. One survey found that 81 percent of Americans think 
the country is too focused on shopping and spending; 88 percent say American 
society is too materialistic.

Psychological studies show that materialism is toxic to happiness, that more 
income and more possessions don’t lead to lasting gains in our sense of 
well-being or satisfaction with our lives. What does make us happy are warm 
personal relationships, and giving rather than getting.

Sustaining people, communities, and nature must henceforth be seen as the core 
goals of economic activity, not hoped for byproducts of an economy based on 
market success, growth for its own sake, and modest regulation
Building the strength needed for change requires, first of all, a political 
fusion among progressives, and that fusion should start with a unified agenda. 
Such an agenda would embrace a profound commitment to social justice and 
environmental protection, a sustained challenge to consumerism and 
commercialism and the lifestyles they offer, a healthy skepticism of 
growthmania, a democratic redefinition of what society should be striving to 
grow, a challenge to corporate dominance and a redefinition of the corporation 
and its goals, and a commitment to an array of pro-democracy reforms in 
campaign finance, elections, the regulation of lobbying, and much more. A 
common agenda would also include an ambitious set of new national indicators 
beyond GDP to inform us of the true quality of life in America. We tend to get 
what we measure, so we should measure what we want.

If some of the ideas just presented seem politically impracticable today, just 
wait until tomorrow. Soon it will be clear to more and more people that it’s 
business as usual that’s the utopian fantasy, while creating something very new 
and different is the practical, pragmatic way forward.

I doubt that we’ll miss our growth fetish after we say good-bye to it.

This article was adapted for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media 
organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical solutions for a just and 
sustainable world, from a speech Speth gave to the E.F. Schumacher Society.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License
James Gustave Speth is a professor at Vermont Law School and a Distinguished 
Senior Fellow at Demos, a nonpartisan public policy research and advocacy 
organization. A former dean of the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental 
Studies, he also co-founded the Natural Resources Defense Council, was founder 
and president of the World Resources Institute, and served as administrator of 
the United Nations Development Programme. He is the author of six books, 
including the award-winning The Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism, 
the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability and Red Sky at 
Morning: America and the Crisis of the Global Environment.

more James Gustave Speth
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