From Here to Economy
Can capitalism be harnessed to solve environmental problems, or
is capitalism itself the problem?
by Stan Cox
23 Apr 2004
When right-wing pundits and corporate flacks compare
environmentalists to watermelons (green on the outside, red on the
inside), they mean it as a slur.
But when eco-socialists look at the wider environmental movement, they
see a big green tomato that had better ripen up, and soon. Hybridizing
the analyses of Karl Marx with those of modern-day ecological
economists, they maintain that we'll never stop degrading the
ecosphere unless we tackle capitalism and the unsustainable growth
that lies at its core. For at least one part of their argument -- that
economic growth is out of control -- eco-socialists can call on plenty
of mainstream backup. For example, the Oakland, Calif.-based group
Redefining Progress reports that in 2000, human consumption and waste
production had reached its highest point ever, exceeding by 15 percent
the planet's biological capacity to produce and absorb.
Capitalism's back-door exit.That we are beginning to burst the seams
of the ecosphere would have come as no surprise to Nicholas
Georgescu-Roegen. An economist at Vanderbilt University from
1950 to 1976, Georgescu-Roegen showed that the entire economic process
can be represented by just two factors: a front-door entrance for
resources -- concentrated energy and highly ordered materials -- and a
back-door exit for wastes. An economy's only product, he argued,
is nonmaterial "enjoyment of life," which can be accumulated
only as memories.
The implications of Georgescu-Roegen's analysis are profound and
unavoidable: Provided our species survives, there lies somewhere in
its future another Stone Age, and the faster our economic growth, the
steeper the decline will be. The next Stone Age will be bleaker
and more toxic than the last, and there will be no shot at a
comeback.
Georgescu-Roegen's 1971 book The Entropy Law and the Economic Process
was read widely and hailed as a seminal work. Then most economists
stuffed it onto their bookshelves to be consulted no more. Its
message was simply too dismal even for the dismal science.
But a brave few, known as ecological economists, have taken
Georgescu-Roegen seriously. [Editor's note: See a series of Grist
articles on ecological economists.] Starting with Herman Daly's 1977
classic Steady-State Economics, they have spent decades drawing up
blueprints for an economic system that could push that new Stone Age
into the immeasurably remote future, while ensuring that the
intervening years are humane, even comfortable.
In a recent textbook, Ecological Economics, Daly and coauthor Joshua
Farley do not urge the demolition and rebuilding of whole economies,
but rather the "stretching and bending" of existing
institutions, in order to squeeze them inside the planet's ecosystems
in a way that does as little damage as possible.
Meet the Flintstones
But stretching and bending won't be enough, say eco-socialists, if we
are to forestall that new Stone Age. For that, we will have to break
completely free of the laws of capitalism.
That message could be put no more clearly than in the title of
Joel Kovel's 2002 book The Enemy of Nature: The End of Capitalism or
the End of the World? Kovel is a professor of social
studies at Bard College and recently joined the journal Capitalism
Nature Socialism as editor.
Full: http://www.gristmagazine.com/grist/maindish/cox042304.asp