Is it the end of shopping?

Audio

As the Federal Government prepares to announce the details of the long – deliberated carbon tax, the Climate Change Minister Greg Combet  remains addicted to strong economic growth.

But is business as usual really possible in our post-carbon world?

Speaking on Lateline Paul Gilding, the author of The Great Disruption said that economic growth is dead in a post-climate change world. He predicts the end of our current economic model of growth along with its wasteful consumerism. The author and former CEO of Greenpeace International says that plans to grow the economy three or four times by 2050 can’t happen because it is just not possible. ‘It would defy laws of physics, biology and chemistry’, he said.

Climate change is a symptom of a greater problem, says Gilding. The real problem is the ‘sacred tenet of global capitalism’, the belief that we can have increasing economic growth on a finite planet.

The challenges we  face  are much broader than climate change, argues Gilding. The problem is that we are addicted to economic growth and believe that we can continue to grow our economies – producing more and more stuff, despite the physical planetary limits.

Knowledge about the limits to economic growth is not new. The Limits to Growth report was published in 1972, detailing the consequences of runaway population and economic growth in the setting of limited resources. It concluded that humanity is dependent on the natural world with collapse being  inevitable  should our ecological footprint continue.

Gilding likens the global economy to a ‘giant ponzi scheme’ where as the money runs out the whole scheme collapses. Even so the IMF is predicting the global output per capita to triple by 2050 and we have already passed the limits of the planet’s capacity to support our economy.

The world is in denial about the speed and scale of the threats we face, claims Gilding. He predicts the coming of ‘the Great Awakening’ preceded by a major world crisis leading to a global emergency that will last for several decades. Gilding does not think it’s the end of humanity but rather the end of economic growth as we know it.

The immediate response to the ‘great disruption and the awakening’ will be to ‘decouple growth’ from carbon emissions making a cleaner more efficient economy while leaving the economic and power structures firmly in place. But once ‘the elephant in the room’ is faced, Gilding suggests  we will mount ‘a war-like’ response where large parts of the old economy and power structures will be destroyed and shopping for pleasure will be a thing of the past.

The immediate future is not pretty; the environmental debt   needs to be repaid. There will be loss of jobs along with substantial loss of life. Gilding predicts that what he refers to as the  ‘one degree war’, needs to commence by 2018 and that planetary recovery could take up to 100 years.

The world is in for a very bumpy ride. Just don’t expect your politicians to tell you so.

 

Categories: books, climate change, news, politics

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1 reply

  1. ..Any doubt that now is the time for the real debate..about the economic crisis that is about whether there is something..much deeper going on evaporated for me this week. In this new one I argued we were..entering a global crisis with a simultaneous and connected economic..and ecological crash what I called …..It had a very strong response at the time and..circulated widely but then it went very quiet until this week. What if it s..telling us that the whole growth model we created over the last 50..years is simply unsustainable economically and ecologically and that..2008 was when we hit the wall when Mother Nature and the market both..said No more. ….Friedman is widely read globally and within minutes..of publication my normally manageable inbox and website went crazy.

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