Macroecology meets macroeconomics: Resource scarcity and global sustainability

  • James H. Brown
  • , Joseph R. Burger
  • , William R. Burnside
  • , Michael Chang
  • , Ana D. Davidson
  • , Trevor S. Fristoe
  • , Marcus J. Hamilton
  • , Sean T. Hammond
  • , Astrid Kodric-Brown
  • , Norman Mercado-Silva
  • , Jeffrey C. Nekola
  • , Jordan G. Okie

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

50 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

The current economic paradigm, which is based on increasing human population, economic development, and standard of living, is no longer compatible with the biophysical limits of the finite Earth. Failure to recover from the economic crash of 2008 is not due just to inadequate fiscal and monetary policies. The continuing global crisis is also due to scarcity of critical resources. Our macroecological studies highlight the role in the economy of energy and natural resources: oil, gas, water, arable land, metals, rare earths, fertilizers, fisheries, and wood. As the modern industrial-technological-informational economy expanded in recent decades, it grew by consuming the Earth's natural resources at unsustainable rates. Correlations between per capita GDP and per capita consumption of energy and other resources across nations and over time demonstrate how economic growth and development depend on "nature's capital". Decades-long trends of decreasing per capita consumption of multiple important commodities indicate that overexploitation has created an unsustainable bubble of population and economy.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)24-32
Número de páginas9
PublicaciónEcological Engineering
Volumen65
DOI
EstadoPublished - abr 2014

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
Financial support was provided by National Institutes of Health (grant T32EB009414 for JHB and JRB), National Science Foundation (grants OISE-0653296 and DEB-1136586 for ADD; grant DEB-0541625 for MJH; and grant DBI-1052875 to the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center for WRB), a NASA Astrobiology Institute Postdoctoral Program Fellowship (for JGO; administered by Oak Ridge Associated Universities), and Rockefeller Foundation (grant for MJH). We thank many colleagues for stimulating discussions and Paul Ehrlich and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on the manuscript.

Financiación

Financial support was provided by National Institutes of Health (grant T32EB009414 for JHB and JRB), National Science Foundation (grants OISE-0653296 and DEB-1136586 for ADD; grant DEB-0541625 for MJH; and grant DBI-1052875 to the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center for WRB), a NASA Astrobiology Institute Postdoctoral Program Fellowship (for JGO; administered by Oak Ridge Associated Universities), and Rockefeller Foundation (grant for MJH). We thank many colleagues for stimulating discussions and Paul Ehrlich and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on the manuscript.

FinanciadoresNúmero del financiador
National Science Foundation Arctic Social Science Program1052875, 1136586, 1639145, OISE-0653296, DBI-1052875, DEB-0541625, DEB-1136586
National Institutes of Health (NIH)T32EB009414
Rockefeller Foundation, The
Oak Ridge Associated Universities
NASA Astrobiology Institute

    ODS de las Naciones Unidas

    Este resultado contribuye a los siguientes Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible

    1. Decent work and economic growth
      Decent work and economic growth

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Environmental Engineering
    • Nature and Landscape Conservation
    • Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law

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