Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist

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Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist Page 36

by Kate Raworth


  I am extremely grateful to Alan Doran, Carl Gombrich, Andrew Graham, George Monbiot and Garry Peterson for reading and giving excellent comments on drafts of the whole text. Special thanks also to Richard King for outstanding data analysis, Marcia Mihotich for the beautiful graphics, and Christian Guthier for the iconic Doughnut images.

  I received insightful comments, ideas and suggestions for the book from many generous people, including Adam Alagiah, Myles Allen, Graham Bannock, Alex Cobham, Sarah Cornell, Anna Cowen, Ian Fitzpatrick, Joss Floyd, Antonio Hill, Erik Gómez-Baggethun, Tony Greenham, Hugh Griffith, Emily Jones, William Kamkwamba, Finn Lewis, Bernard Lietaer, Nick Lloyd, Eric Lonergan, André Maia Chagas, George Marshall, Clive Menzies, Forrest Metz, Asher Miller, Tom Murphy, Cathy O’Neill, Rob Patterson, Joshua Pearce, Johan Rockström, Emma Smith, Niki Sporrong, Robin Stafford, Will Steffen, Joss Tantram, Ken Webster, Tommy Wiedmann, Rachel Wilshaw and John Ziniades. A big thank-you especially to Janine Benyus, Sam Muirhead and Yuan Yang for the inspiring conversations that we had in interviews for this book.

  I greatly appreciate the support I have had from many colleagues and friends, among them Sasha Abramsky, Al-Hassan Adam, Steve Bass, Sarah Best, Sumi Dhanarajan, Konstantin Dierks, Joshua Farley, Flora Gathorne-Hardy, Maja Göpel, Alissa Goodman, Duncan Green, Thalia Kidder, Sarah Knott, Diana Liverman, Ruth Mayne, Eka Morgan, Annalise Moser, Tim O’Riordan, Angelique Orr, Trista Patterson, Pete Shepherd, Claire Shine, Kitty Stewart, Julia Tilford, Tom Thornton, Katherine Trebeck, Aris Vrettos, Kevin Watkins, Stewart Wallis, Tim Weiskel, Anders Wijkman and Rebecca Wrigley. In the toughest of writing times, five people gave me outstanding advice: my deepest thanks to Phil Bloomer, Alan Buckley, Jo Confino, Julian Masters and Jo de Waal.

  In years of exploring new economic thinking I have been inspired by many thinkers whose writing gave me those Aha! moments from which there is no turning back: thank you Michel Bauwens, Eric Beinhocker, John Berger, Janine Benyus, David Bollier, Ha-Joon Chang, Robert Costanza, Herman Daly, Diane Elson, Nancy Folbre, John Fullerton, Yann Giraud, Sally Goerner, Tim Jackson, Steve Keen, Marjorie Kelly, George Lakoff, Bernard Lietaer, Hunter Lovins, Manfred Max-Neef, Donella Meadows, Mary Mellor, Elinor Ostrom, Jeremy Rifkin, Johan Rockström, Amartya Sen, Juliet Schor, Fritz Schumacher, Will Steffen, John Sterman, Arron Stibbe and Ken Webster.

  I am deeply grateful to my parents, Jenny and Ricky Raworth, and to my sister Sophie, for their unwavering support for my economic adventures.

  Last and most, thank you to my partner in life Roman Krznaric, without whose love, conversation and co-parenting I would never have written this book. And to our children Siri and Cas who, like all children, deserve to thrive in a safe and just twenty-first century.

  INDEX

  The page references in this index correspond to the printed edition from which this ebook was created. To find a specific word or phrase from the index, please use the search feature of your ebook reader.

  Page numbers in italics denote illustrations

  A

  Aalborg, Denmark, 290

  Abbott, Anthony ‘Tony’, 31

  ABCD group, 148

  Abramovitz, Moses, 262

  absolute decoupling, 260–61

  Acemoglu, Daron, 86

  advertising, 58, 106–7, 112, 281

  Agbodjinou, Sénamé, 231

  agriculture, 5, 46, 72–3, 148, 155, 178, 181, 183

  Alaska, 9

  Alaska Permanent Fund, 194

  Alperovitz, Gar, 177

  alternative enterprise designs, 190–91

  altruism, 100, 104

  Amazon, 192, 196, 276

  Amazon rainforest, 105–6, 253

  American Economic Association, 3

  American Enterprise Institute, 67

  American Tobacco Corporation, 107

  Andes, 54

  animal spirits, 110

  Anthropocene epoch, 48, 253

  anthropocentrism, 115

  Apertuso, 230

  Apple, 85, 192

  Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), 148

  Arendt, Hannah, 115–16

  Argentina, 55, 274

  Aristotle, 32, 272

  Arrow, Kenneth, 134

  Articles of Association and Memoranda, 233

  Arusha, Tanzania, 202

  Asia Wage Floor Alliance, 177

  Asian financial crisis (1997), 90

  Asknature.org, 232

  Athens, 57

  austerity, 163

  Australia, 31, 103, 177, 180, 211, 224–6, 255, 260

  Austria, 263, 274

  availability bias, 112

  AXIOM, 230

  Axtell, Robert, 150

  Ayres, Robert, 263

  B

  B Corp, 241

  Babylon, 13

  Baker, Josephine, 157

  balancing feedback loops, 138–41, 155, 271

  Ballmer, Steve, 231

  Bangla Pesa, 185–6, 293

  Bangladesh, 10, 226

  Bank for International Settlements, 256

  Bank of America, 149

  Bank of England, 145, 147, 256

  banking, see under finance

  Barnes, Peter, 201

  Barroso, José Manuel, 41

  Bartlett, Albert Allen ‘Al’, 247

  basic income, 177, 194, 199–201

  basic personal values, 107–9

  Basle, Switzerland, 80

  Bauwens, Michel, 197

  Beckerman, Wilfred, 258

  Beckham, David, 171

  Beech-Nut Packing Company, 107

  behavioural economics, 11, 111–14

  behavioural psychology, 103, 128

  Beinhocker, Eric, 158

  Belgium, 236, 252

  Bentham, Jeremy, 98

  Benyus, Janine, 116, 218, 223–4, 227, 232, 237, 241

  Berger, John, 12, 281

  Berlin Wall, 141

  Bermuda, 277

  Bernanke, Ben, 146

  Bernays, Edward, 107, 112, 281–3

  Bhopal gas disaster (1984), 9

  Bible, 19, 114, 151

  Big Bang (1986), 87

  billionaires, 171, 200, 289

  biodiversity, 10, 46, 48–9, 52, 85, 115, 155, 208, 210, 242, 299

  as common pool resource, 201

  and land conversion, 49

  and inequality, 172

  and reforesting, 50

  biomass, 73, 118, 210, 212, 221

  biomimicry, 116, 218, 227, 229

  bioplastic, 224, 293

  Birmingham, West Midlands, 10

  Black, Fischer, 100–101

  Blair, Anthony ‘Tony’, 171

  Blockchain, 187, 192

  blood donation, 104, 118

  Body Shop, The, 232–4

  Bogotá, Colombia, 119

  Bolivia, 54

  Boston, Massachusetts, 3

  Bowen, Alex, 261

  Bowles, Sam, 104

  Box, George, 22

  Boyce, James, 209

  Brasselberg, Jacob, 187

  Brazil, 124, 226, 281, 290

  bread riots, 89

  Brisbane, Australia, 31

  Brown, Gordon, 146

  Brynjolfsson, Erik, 193, 194, 258

  Buddhism, 54

  buen vivir, 54

  Bullitt Center, Seattle, 217

  Bunge, 148

  Burkina Faso, 89

  Burmark, Lynell, 13

  business, 36, 43, 68, 88–9

  automation, 191–5, 237, 258, 278

  boom and bust, 246

  and circular economy, 212, 215–19, 220, 224, 227–30, 232–4, 292

  and complementary currencies, 184–5, 292

  and core economy, 80

  and creative destruction, 142

  and feedback loops, 148

  and finance, 183, 184

  and green growth, 261, 265, 269

  and households, 63, 68

  living metrics, 241

  and market, 68, 88

  micro-businesses,
9

  and neoliberalism, 67, 87

  ownership, 190–91

  and political funding, 91–2, 171–2

  and taxation, 23, 276–7

  workers’ rights, 88, 91, 269

  butterfly economy, 220–42

  C

  C–ROADS (Climate Rapid Overview and Decision Support), 153

  C40 network, 280

  calculating man, 98

  California, United States, 213, 224, 293

  Cambodia, 254

  Cameron, David, 41

  Canada, 196, 255, 260, 281, 282

  cancer, 124, 159, 196

  Capital Institute, 236

  carbon emissions, 49–50, 59, 75

  and decoupling, 260, 266

  and forests, 50, 52

  and inequality, 58

  reduction of, 184, 201, 213, 216–18, 223–7, 239–41, 260, 266

  stock–flow dynamics, 152–4

  taxation, 201, 213

  Cargill, 148

  Carney, Mark, 256

  Caterpillar, 228

  Catholic Church, 15, 19

  Cato Institute, 67

  Celts, 54

  central banks, 6, 87, 145, 146, 147, 183, 184, 256

  Chang, Ha-Joon, 82, 86, 90

  Chaplin, Charlie, 157

  Chiapas, Mexico, 121–2

  Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), 100–101

  Chicago School, 34, 99

  Chile, 7, 42

  China, 1, 7, 48, 154, 289–90

  automation, 193

  billionaires, 200, 289

  greenhouse gas emissions, 153

  inequality, 164

  Lake Erhai doughnut analysis, 56

  open-source design, 196

  poverty reduction, 151, 198

  renewable energy, 239

  tiered pricing, 213

  Chinese Development Bank, 239

  chrematistics, 32, 273

  Christianity, 15, 19, 114, 151

  cigarettes, 107, 124

  circular economy, 220–42, 257

  Circular Flow diagram, 19–20, 28, 62–7, 64, 70, 78, 87, 91, 92, 93, 262

  Citigroup, 149

  Citizen Reaction Study, 102

  civil rights movement, 77

  Cleveland, Ohio, 190

  climate change, 1, 3, 5, 29, 41, 45–53, 63, 74, 75–6, 91, 141, 144, 201

  circular economy, 239, 241–2

  dynamics of, 152–5

  and G20, 31

  and GDP growth, 255, 256, 260, 280

  and heuristics, 114

  and human rights, 10

  and values, 126

  climate positive cities, 239

  closed systems, 74

  coffee, 221

  cognitive bias, 112–14

  Colander, David, 137

  Colombia, 119

  common-pool resources, 82–3, 181, 201–2

  commons, 69, 82–4, 287

  collaborative, 78, 83, 191, 195, 196, 264, 292

  cultural, 83

  digital, 82, 83, 192, 197, 281

  and distribution, 164, 180, 181–2, 205, 267

  Embedded Economy, 71, 73, 77–8, 82–4, 85, 92

  knowledge, 197, 201–2, 204, 229, 231, 292

  commons

  and money creation, see complementary currencies

  natural, 82, 83, 180, 181–2, 201, 265

  and regeneration, 229, 242, 267, 292

  and state, 85, 93, 197, 237

  and systems, 160

  tragedy of, 28, 62, 69, 82, 181

  triumph of, 83

  and values, 106, 108

  Commons Trusts, 201

  complementary currencies, 158, 182–8, 236, 292

  complex systems, 28, 129–62

  complexity science, 136–7

  Consumer Reaction Study, 102

  consumerism, 58, 102, 121, 280–84

  cooking, 45, 80, 186

  Coote, Anna, 278

  Copenhagen, Denmark, 124

  Copernicus, Nicolaus, 14–15

  copyright, 195, 197, 204

  core economy, 79–80

  Corporate To Do List, 215–19

  Costa Rica, 172

  Council of Economic Advisers, US, 6, 37

  Cox, Jo, 117

  cradle to cradle, 224

  creative destruction, 142

  Cree, 282

  Crompton, Tom, 125–6

  cross-border flows, 89–90

  crowdsourcing, 204

  cuckoos, 32, 35, 36, 38, 40, 54, 60, 159, 244, 256, 271

  currencies, 182–8, 236, 274, 292

  D

  da Vinci, Leonardo, 13, 94–5

  Dallas, Texas, 120

  Daly, Herman, 74, 143, 271

  Danish Nudging Network, 124

  Darwin, Charles, 14

  Debreu, Gerard, 134

  debt, 37, 146–7, 172–3, 182–5, 247, 255, 269

  decoupling, 193, 210, 258–62, 273

  defeat device software, 216

  deforestation, 49–50, 74, 208, 210

  degenerative linear economy, 211–19, 222–3, 237

  degrowth, 244

  DeMartino, George, 161

  democracy, 77, 171–2, 258

  demurrage, 274

  Denmark, 180, 275, 290

  deregulation, 82, 87, 269

  derivatives, 100–101, 149

  Devas, Charles Stanton, 97

  Dey, Suchitra, 178

  Diamond, Jared, 154

  diarrhoea, 5

  differential calculus, 131, 132

  digital revolution, 191–2, 264

  diversify–select–amplify, 158

  double spiral, 54

  Doughnut model, 10–11, 11, 23–5, 44, 51

  and aspiration, 58–9, 280–84

  big picture, 28, 42, 61–93

  distribution, 29, 52, 57, 58, 76, 93, 158, 163–205

  ecological ceiling, 10, 11, 44, 45, 46, 49, 51, 218, 254, 295, 298

  goal, 25–8, 31–60

  and governance, 57, 59

  growth agnosticism, 29–30, 243–85

  human nature, 28–9, 94–128

  and population, 57–8

  regeneration, 29, 158, 206–42

  social foundation, 10, 11, 44, 45, 49, 51, 58, 77, 174, 200, 254, 295–6

  systems, 28, 129–62

  and technology, 57, 59

  Douglas, Margaret, 78–9

  Dreyfus, Louis, 148

  ‘Dumb and Dumber in Macroeconomics’ (Solow), 135

  Durban, South Africa, 214

  E

  Earning by Learning, 120

  Earth-system science, 44–53, 115, 216, 288, 298

  Easter Island, 154

  Easterlin, Richard, 265–6

  eBay, 105, 192

  eco-literacy, 115

  ecological ceiling, 10, 11, 44, 45, 46, 49, 51, 218, 254, 295, 298

  Ecological Performance Standards, 241

  Econ 101 course, 8, 77

  Economics (Lewis), 114

  Economics (Samuelson), 19–20, 63–7, 70, 74, 78, 86, 91, 92, 93, 262

  Economy for the Common Good, 241

  ecosystem services, 7, 116, 269

  Ecuador, 54

  education, 9, 43, 45, 50–52, 85, 169–70, 176, 200, 249, 279

  economic, 8, 11, 18, 22, 24, 36, 287–93

  environmental, 115, 239–40

  girls’, 57, 124, 178, 198

  online, 83, 197, 264, 290

  pricing, 118–19

  efficient market hypothesis, 28, 62, 68, 87

  Egypt, 48, 89

  Eisenstein, Charles, 116

  electricity, 9, 45, 236, 240

  and Bangla Pesa, 186

  cars, 231

  Ethereum, 187–8

  and MONIAC, 75, 262

  pricing, 118, 213

  see also renewable energy

  Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom, 145

  Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 220

  Embedded Economy, 71–93, 263
>
  business, 88–9

  commons, 82–4

  Earth, 72–6

  economy, 77–8

  finance, 86–8

  household, 78–81

  market, 81–2

  power, 91–92

  society, 76–7

  state, 84–6

  trade, 89–90

  employment, 36, 37, 51, 142, 176

  automation, 191–5, 237, 258, 278

  labour ownership, 188–91

  workers’ rights, 88, 90, 269

  Empty World, 74

  Engels, Friedrich, 88

  environment

  and circular economy, 220–42, 257

  conservation, 121–2

  and degenerative linear economy, 211–19, 222–3

  degradation, 5, 9, 10, 29, 44–53, 74, 154, 172, 196, 206–42

  education on, 115, 239–40

  externalities, 152

  fair share, 216–17

  and finance, 234–7

  generosity, 218–19, 223–7

  green growth, 41, 210, 243–85

  nudging, 123–5

  taxation and quotas, 213–14, 215

  zero impact, 217–18, 238, 241

  Environmental Dashboard, 240–41

  environmental economics, 7, 11, 114–16

  Environmental Kuznets Curve, 207–11, 241

  environmental space, 54

  Epstein, Joshua, 150

  equilibrium theory, 134–62

  Ethereum, 187–8

  ethics, 160–62

  Ethiopia, 9, 226, 254

  Etsy, 105

  Euclid, 13, 15

  European Central Bank, 145, 275

  European Commission, 41

  European Union (EU), 92, 153, 210, 222, 255, 258

  Evergreen Cooperatives, 190

  Evergreen Direct Investing (EDI), 273

  exogenous shocks, 141

  exponential growth, 39, 246–85

  externalities, 143, 152, 213

  Exxon Valdez oil spill (1989), 9

  F

  Facebook, 192

  fair share, 216–17

  Fama, Eugene, 68, 87

  fascism, 234, 277

  Federal Reserve, US, 87, 145, 146, 271, 282

  feedback loops, 138–41, 143, 148, 155, 250, 271

  feminist economics, 11, 78–81, 160

  Ferguson, Thomas, 91–2

  finance

  animal spirits, 110

  bank runs, 139

  Black–Scholes model, 100–101

  boom and bust, 28–9, 110, 144–7

 

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