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BOOK REVIEW

'Deep Economy' by Bill McKibben
Why a growth-oriented economy is no longer good for our planet.
By Donna Seaman

March 11, 2007/L.A. TIMES

Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future
Bill McKibben
Times Books: 262 pp., $25

"Deep economy" is a riff on "deep ecology," a philosophical and
scientific perspective that views humankind as but one species in the
grand web of life. Ecology, of course, refers to the intricate pattern
of relations between living entities and their environment. We most
often use the word "economy" to refer to "the structure of economic
life," to quote Webster's. But economy derives from the Greek word
oikonomia, which translates as "household manager." The archaic
definition for economy, therefore, is management of a household. The
second definition is "thrifty and efficient use of material
resources." The latter is the exact opposite, as Bill McKibben so
vividly illustrates, of today's growth-focused global economy.

The fact that we envision the economy as an almost mystical mega-force
that dominates every aspect of our existence, rather than something
within our control, is one motivating factor for McKibben's
masterfully crafted, deeply thoughtful and mind-expanding treatise.
Another is the hard truth that the "doctrine of endless economic
expansion" enriches few and is proving increasingly unjust and
deleterious for many.

And then there is this grim reality: "One consequence of nearly three
hundred years of rapid economic growth has been stress on the natural
world: we've dug it up, eroded it away, cut it down." Not only have we
seriously depleted the planet's resources, our incessant burning of
fossil fuels (how inventive we've been in making use of this ancient
cache of energy) has instigated global warming, which is underway at a
rate much more rapid than anyone imagined possible just a few years
ago. Yet, "to most of us the health of the economy seems far more
palpable, far more real, than the health of the planet."

A hard-working journalist of conscience, McKibben wrote in 1989 one of
the first books about global warming, "The End of Nature," a book just
as bracing now as then. In the interim, he has tackled some of the
most intriguing and baffling aspects of our lives, confronting
overpopulation in "Maybe One: A Case for Smaller Families," and
questioning our enthrallment to technological innovations in "Enough:
Staying Human in an Engineered Age." In "Wandering Home," McKibben
treks across his beloved home turf in Vermont and the Adirondacks,
visiting people who have developed innovative ways to live in sync
with nature's cycles and capacities. Now, in his 10th book, McKibben
offers an incisive critique of the unintended consequences of our
oil-fueled, growth-oriented economy, and he calls for a new ecological
paradigm.

Writing with reassuring exactitude and geometric clarity (John McPhee
is a mentor), offhand wit and warmth (he cares), McKibben neatly
summarizes the work of forward-looking scientists and economists as he
explores the ways that growth economics have led us astray. Take the
assumption that more is better. Certainly this is true as people move
from poverty to prosperity. But at some point the quest for wealth and
consumer goods yields negative returns: We end up with "more stuff and
less happiness."

McKibben isn't indulging in self-help babble when he makes this
deceptively simple observation. Happiness is a significant
quality-of-life indicator, and evidence shows that happiness is
diminishing in inverse proportion to the economy's expansion. McKibben
marshals the evidence to quantify what so many of us observe: People
are overworked and harried, and we are getting less by working more.
Think about the loss of health insurance and pensions. As McKibben
writes, "Just as our increasing 'prosperity' has somehow managed to
produce less time, it has also magically undercut our security." And
we're not the only species to suffer. As we focus on corporate profit
rather than personal and societal well-being, the damage we're doing
to the biosphere grows ever more severe.

The economic imperative has had another curious consequence. McKibben
writes, "The story of the last five hundred years is the story of
continued emancipation. The people of the modern world have freed
themselves from innumerable oppressions: absolute monarchy, feudalism,
serfdom, slavery." However, enthralled by growth economics, the
mesmerizing evolution of technology, and our cherished myth of the
rugged individual, we have taken the notion of liberation so far,
McKibben believes, that we've become "hyper-individualists," with a
diminished sense of connection to others and to the Earth. Civic
involvement weakens (look at low voter turnout), and, most disturbing,
we accept economic inequality, the huge gap between "the rich and
everyone else" that McKibben describes as "so gross that it's almost
as much farce as tragedy."

Direct, common-sensical and unabashedly sincere, McKibben is a master
of stark equations, striking analogies and resonant metaphors. He
likes parables, sounding now and then like the Sunday school teacher
he wryly admits having been. He is a writer on a mission, but he is
not overbearing. He does not issue doomsday pronouncements; there
isn't a hint of holier-than-thou smugness. No guilt-tripping or
humankind-bashing. McKibben is concerned, even alarmed, but he strives
to be hopeful.

And he is proactive. As part of his inquiry into the economics of
food, a crucial subject, McKibben decides to eat only local foods over
the course of one Vermont winter. As he chronicles his instructive
experiment, he presents harrowing insights into the truth about big
agriculture, citing industrialized farming abominations with cruelty
to animals at one end of the grim spectrum and wastefulness at the
other. Thanks to our "system of consolidation," McKibben observes,
"the average bite of food an American eats has traveled fifteen
hundred miles before it reaches her lips." Because "a gallon of
gasoline weighs about seven pounds, and when you burn it you release
about five pounds of carbon into the atmosphere," this isn't the ideal
way to go.

Hence McKibben's pleasure in chronicling the rise in urban gardens,
community-supported farms and the farmers' market, where fresh,
healthy and environmentally sustaining food is sold by the farmers who
grow it to the individuals who will eat it in a personal exchange that
is nourishing for body and soul. "When you go to the farmers' market,
in other words, you're not just acquiring tomatoes, you're making
friends." This is the "economics of neighborliness," which fosters
that all-important sense of connection and responsibility to one
another and to the planet. With the farmers' market as the nucleus,
McKibben constructs his paradigm for community economics, which he
believes can liberate us from an impersonal economic system grown
malevolent and enable us to reduce fossil fuel use and slow global
warming.

Local economies rooted in potentially self-sufficient communities (as
alternatives to our current immense and unwieldy system) make good
sense. As the saying goes, the bigger they are, the harder they fall.
Of course, energy is the overarching challenge. Can we localize
energy? Can we establish viable and durable substitutes for fossil
fuels? Solar and wind power in enlightened Vermont are encouraging,
but they comprise mere drops in the bucket. And while a Hong Kong
health club has cleverly harnessed the leg power generated on its
treadmills and Stairmasters to keep the lights on, most of the news
out of a quickly industrializing China, as McKibben documents, has the
makings of an ecological nightmare.

McKibben is wise to remind us that our forefathers invented the "idea
of economic growth," a concept that has now run its course, because we
are capable of creating a new deep economy, one that genuinely values
life.

Ultimately, McKibben's intelligent, balanced and inspiring manifesto
sets forth a beautiful truth: What is best for humankind is best for
the whole of the living world. The big question is, as global warming
gathers force, will we have time to make changes of our own devising?

---
Donna Seaman is an associate editor for Booklist, editor of the
anthology "In Our Nature: Stories of Wildness" and host of the radio
program "Open Books" in Chicago. Seaman's author interviews are
collected in "Writers on the Air."
--
Jim Devine / "The truth is more important than the facts." -- Frank Lloyd Wright

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