Showing posts with label growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label growth. Show all posts

Friday, 22 May 2015

UKIP - Greener than the Greens?



Well I've still not got it together enough yet to write a big piece on the election results, and things are still settling down out there.

I will say that the result has had the affect of turning almost the whole country against the so-called 'government' and it looks like most people are now looking locally at last.

One party existed purely for entertainment and humour and that was of course UKIP. As expected by most of us they won just one seat, but I think Dummy Nigel's after election cabaret did surprise most of us. He has of course now destroyed whatever political career that he thought lay in front of him.

And the 'party' itself seems to be in terminal decline, with the tories stealing many of their maddest ideas and presenting them as if saying something means it will happen. In/out referendum, bringing back foxhunting, trying to ban EU citizens living and working here etc etc. Mad stuff that wouldn't be believed in a work of fiction ...

UKIP's sole MP Douglas Carswell started flirting with the Green Party soon after winning his seat, suggesting we had a common issue over the way votes are counted, that we smaller parties should push for AV or whatever system is currently fashionable, so that small parties can get an appropriate amount of seats. (Of course the stunning SNP victory proves that a small party CAN win under FPTP, but he seems to have missed that).

It got me thinking how UKIP and the Greens resemble each other. Well the Greens aren't absolute supporters of the EU in the way that the big parties (and Labour) are. But our reasoning is completely different to the Little Englander drivel spouted by the kippies. I'm sure that eventually the EU will collapse under its own weight but for now the ability to live and work anywhere in Europe is esomething we don't really appreciate it - until some idiots threaten to take it away and force us to live in this bland little island!

If we did leave the EU we'd take a huge hit to our economy - I reckon anywhere between a 10% and 15% fall in GDP. Even the Greens don't want the economy to shrink that fast, but UKIP do! Greener than the Greens ....

And their other bete noire, immigration? Let's think about this ... why does immigration exist? The answer is simple - growth and demographics. Corporatism and consumerism is based on endless growth. Yeah, I know WE know that's impossible and unsustainable, but the less bright parties - all of 'em - don't. And demographics - we've an ageing and not particularly fertile population and if governments are going to continue to be able to pay pensions and benefits they need a supply of young, fit and employable imported people. UKIP wants to close this door so we have to imply that they also want to start reversing growth - and they plan to do it far quicker than we ever could. Again, UKIP, Greener than the Greens.

You couldn't make it up ...




Thursday, 10 October 2013

exactly!

Post Carbon Institute Calls on Environmentalists to Embrace Post-Growth Economics Wednesday, 09 October 2013 11:00 By Candice Bernd, Truthout | Report
  • Rob Hopkins.Rob Hopkins, founder of the Transition Network. (Photo: Transition Network / Flickr)A new policy paper from the Post Carbon Institute, a nonprofit think tank, argues the environmental movement must embrace what the authors have deemed a "new normal" of declining economic growth while building solidarity with the so-called new economy movement, emphasizing community-based, sustainable solutions in an era of globalization.
The paper, "Climate After Growth," was cowritten by Post Carbon Institute’s executive director, Asher Miller and Rob Hopkins, founder of the Transition Network, which supports community-led responses to climate change and helps to build strong, sustainable local economies.

The paper hopes to put to rest the false dichotomy between the imperative of economic growth over environmental protection once and for all by making the case that the over-arching paradigm of economic growth is coming to an end in any case, regardless of the ongoing climate crisis.

"There’s an opportunity for environmental groups and others to offer up an alternative, and that alternative, we argue, could be emphasizing community resilience," Miller told Truthout. "If we can address climate issues while improving quality of life, we can build resilience, which we need to do; we can reduce our dependence on fossil fuels; and we can offer up a different way of creating goods and well-being that aren’t relying upon globalized [economic] growth."

By community resilience, Miller and Hopkins are referring to the ability of a community to "bounce back from disruption to a normal state of being," according to the paper. The amount of resilience in a community is defined by the amount of change the community can undergo and still retain its basic structure, the degree to which the community can self-organize and the ability of the community to build the capacity for learning and adaption.  

The authors argue the concept of community resilience will become more popular as environmental shocks to economic systems and local communities become more commonplace heading into another new normal - an era of frequent extreme weather events caused by climate change.

The authors don’t believe that any meaningful climate policy can be enacted while elected officials continue to prioritize economic growth above all else, and they also doubt that government efforts to stimulate the economy can be successful because there has been a more fundamental shift in the global economy.

Miller and Hopkins argue that without programs like the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing, the US economy would be in a "tailspin" and that the argument between austerity or stimulus as a means of getting back to sustained economic growth is now beside the point:
Unfortunately, it’s taking more and more debt to create each dollar of growth in the US - from $1.74 in the 1970s to $5.67 in the 2000s. The World Economic Forum projects that global credit will need to nearly double by 2020 - from $109 trillion in 2009 to $213 trillion - just to maintain the current, low level of GDP growth.
How long can this be maintained before the other shoe drops - massive defaults, lending dries up, or "haircuts" become mandatory? In September 2013 William White, the former chief economist of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) - famous for being the only head of a major global institution who foresaw the 2007/2008 global banking crisis - warned that exuberance in the credit markets "looks to me like 2007 all over again, but even worse." According to the BIS, the share of "leveraged loans" (those used by the weakest borrowers) has jumped to 45 percent of all loans - 10 percent higher than in the peak of the bubble in 2007 to 2008.
A major reason the US economy can never get back to an era of sustained growth in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is because we have come up against the end of the era of cheap energy.
As the authors cite, oil fields are declining at an average rate of 4 million barrels per day, which must be replaced each year just to maintain current levels of oil production. Those traditional oil fields are being replaced with expensive and risky forms of extraction, such as hydraulic fracturing and deepwater drilling to reach less conventional forms of energy such as shale gas and Canadian tar sands.

"What we’re putting out to environmental NGOs . . . is that we don’t necessarily expect people to change their strategies or change their communication. What we want is just for them to try to internalize these new realities and recognize that whether or not they’re talking about the end of economic growth publicly, that is what we’re dealing with."

Miller and Hopkins hope the small, but growing, new economy movement can get a boost from the well-established environmental movement in what they see as a practical path forward in a hectic future that will be defined by the "new normals," which the authors have outlined in the paper.
The ongoing divestment campaign, which pressures universities, churches, cities and business leaders to divest their stock holdings from the top 200 fossil fuel companies, was an example the authors mention of a way the environmental movement could build the connection between strong local economies and sustainability issues. The divestment campaign has been championed by 350.org and student leaders on college campuses across the nation.

The authors suggest that the campaign could not only urge leaders to divest their shares from the fossil fuel industry, but reinvest those shares in community resilience efforts, such as community-owned renewable energy projects, which need the capital.

"It is more resilient and creates a benefit for communities when there’s renewable energy projects that are on a smaller-scale; they’re distributed, they’re owned by the community and they’re appropriate to that ecosystem, the ecology of the community that they’re in," Miller said.
But the reinvestment strategy is just one small step in connecting the environmental movement to efforts to create resilient local economic measures. The burgeoning community resilience movement is still working to build its capacity and network, according to the authors.

But what could really give the new economy movement the platform it needs to be successful, the authors say, is for leaders in the climate justice community to acknowledge the "elephant in the room" - that the economic growth paradigm is coming to an end in the 21st century.