Depleting Resources
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 1: Time to Upgrade (pages
3-14)
And it’s not just other species we’re
endangering. As anthropologists Jared Diamond and Ronald
Wright recently reminded us, past human civilizations
(Sumer, Rome, the Maya, Easter Island) did on a smaller
scale what our own economic system seems bent on doing
planet-wide: they destroyed their resource bases and
crashed. The pattern is hauntingly familiar. First, the
civilization finds a formula — agriculture,
irrigation, fishing, capitalism — for extracting
value from ecosystems. Because the formula works so well,
the civilization’s leaders become blindly attached
to it. Eventually, the key resources on which the
formula depends become depleted and the inflexible
civilization collapses like a house of cards.
...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 2: A Short History of
Capitalism (pages 15-32)
DESTRUCTION OF NATURE
Humans began ravaging nature long before capitalism
was a gleam in Adam Smith’s eye. Surplus
capitalism, however, has exponentially enlarged the scale
of that ravaging.
I promised no grim numbers, but I’ll cite just
one. In 2005, a United Nations–sponsored research
team reported that roughly 60 percent of the ecosystems
that support life on earth are being used unsustainably.
Such overuse, reported the Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment, increases the likelihood that abrupt,
nonlinear changes will seriously affect human well-being.
The potential consequences include floods, droughts, heat
waves, fishery collapse, dead zones along coasts, sea
level rises, and new diseases.
Thoughtful people can debate whether population or
technology is more responsible than capitalism for our
loss of ecosystems and biodiversity. No doubt all play a
role. But most of the damage isn’t done by the
numerous poor; it’s done by the far fewer rich. The
United States, for example, with 5 percent of the
world’s people, has dumped nearly 30 percent of our
species’ cumulative carbon dioxide wastes into the
atmosphere. It’s our excess consumption, rather
than the poor’s meager gleanings, that’s the
larger problem, and surplus capitalism is the handmaiden
of that excess.
Technology, of course, greatly magnifies our impact on
the planet, but technology by itself is mere know-how.
It’s the choice of technologies, and the scale at
which they’re deployed, that affects the planet.
Electricity, for example, can be generated in many ways.
When corporations choose among them, however, their
choice is driven not by “least harm to
nature,” but by “most bang for the
buck.” And, in doing their calculations, they count
the cost of nature as zero. Hence we have lots of
fossil-fuel burning and little use of solar, wind, and
tidal energy.
The same calculus drives corporations’ approach
to agriculture, logging, and many other activities. The
result is at once humbling and chilling: capitalism as we
know it is devouring creation. It’s living off
nature’s capital and calling it growth. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 6: Trusteeship of Creation
(pages 79-100)
Gifts of creation were produced only once and are
irreplaceable. By contrast, products traded in markets
tend to be mass-produced and highly disposable.
It’s hard to imagine a deity who’d view such
temporal goods as equivalent to his or her enduring
handiwork. The question is whether creation’s
irreplaceable gifts are different enough to merit
different treatment by our economic operating system. A
strong case can be made that they are.
The case is moral as well as economic. The moral
argument is that we have a duty to preserve irreplaceable
gifts of creation, whereas we have no comparable duty
toward transient commercial goods. The economic argument
is that any society that depletes its natural capital is
bound to become impoverished over time. I find both lines
of argument convincing.
But what’s the reality today? Here we encounter
two disconcerting facts. The first is that there are very
few property rights protecting nature’s gifts. With
the exception of a few set-asides such as parks and
wilderness areas, we subject creation’s gifts to
the same rules as Wal-Mart’s merchandise. The
second is that the right of corporations to profit
dominates all other rights.
It’s time to treat creation’s gifts
differently, to put different “tags” on them
so markets will recognize them and apply different rules
to them. This chapter shows how we can do that. ...
It seems to me that, if anything is divine, it should
be gifts of creation. Morally, they’re gifts we
inherit together and must pass on, undiminished, to
future generations. Economically, they’re
irreplaceable and invaluable capital. Protection of these
shared assets should trump transient private gain. Broad
benefit should trump narrow benefit. The commons should
trump capital. This should be written into our economic
operating system and enforced by the courts. ...
read the whole chapter
|
To share this page with a friend:
right click, choose "send," and add your
comments.
|
|
Red links have not been
visited; .
Green links are pages you've seen
|
Essential Documents pertinent
to this theme:
essential_documents
|
|