I'm just paging through the Proceedings of a De-Growth conference in
Paris last year, whose web site is

http://events.it-sudparis.eu/degrowthconference/en/

This 322 page pdf is a treasure box of articles dealing with the
Jevons Paradox, Georgescu-Roegen, Daly's steady state economics,
sustainable development, etc.  If you wonder where the relevant
literature about steady-state or no-growth economics is, this
collection is an excellent entry point.

Here is the declaration passed by the conference participants:

DECLARATION

We, participants in the Economic De-Growth For Ecological
Sustainability And Social Equity Conference held in Paris on April
18-19, 2008 make the following declaration:

 1. Economic growth (as indicated by increasing real GDP or GNP)
    represents an increase in production, consumption and investment
    in the pursuit of economic surplus, inevitably leading to
    increased use of materials, energy and land.

 2. Despite improvements in the ecological efficiency of the
    production and consumption of goods and services, global economic
    growth has resulted in increased extraction of natural resources
    and increased waste and emissions.

 3. Global economic growth has not succeeded in reducing poverty
    substantially, due to unequal exchange in trade and financial
    markets, which has increased inequality between countries.

 4. As the established principles of physics and ecology demonstrate,
    there is an eventual limit to the scale of global production and
    consumption, and to the scale national economies can attain
    without imposing environmental and social costs on others
    elsewhere or future generations.

 5. The best available scientific evidence indicates that the global
    economy has grown beyond ecologically sustainable limits, as have
    many national economies, especially those of the wealthiest
    countries (primarily industrialised countries in the global
    North).

 6. There is also mounting evidence that global growth in production
    and consumption is socially unsustainable and uneconomic (in the
    sense that its costs outweigh its benefits).

 7. By using more than their legitimate share of global environmental
    resources, the wealthiest nations are effectively reducing the
    environmental space available to poorer nations, and imposing
    adverse environmental impacts on them.

 8. If we do not respond to this situation by bringing global economic
    activity into line with the capacity of our ecosystems, and
    redistributing wealth and income globally so that they meet our
    societal needs, the result will be a process of involuntary and
    uncontrolled economic decline or collapse, with potentially
    serious social impacts, especially for the most disadvantaged.


We therefore call for a paradigm shift from the general and unlimited
pursuit of economic growth to a concept of "right-sizing" the global
and national economies.

 1. At the global level, "right-sizing" means reducing the global
    ecological footprint (including the carbon footprint) to a
    sustainable level.

 2. In countries where the per capita footprint is greater than the
    sustainable global level, rightsizing implies a reduction to this
    level within a reasonable timeframe.

 3. In countries where severe poverty remains, right-sizing implies
    increasing consumption by those in poverty as quickly as possible,
    in a sustainable way, to a level adequate for a decent life,
    following locally determined poverty-reduction paths rather than
    externally imposed development policies.

 4. This will require increasing economic activity in some cases; but
    redistribution of income and wealth both within and between
    countries is a more essential part of this process.


The paradigm shift involves degrowth in wealthy parts of the world.

 1. The process by which right-sizing may be achieved in the
    wealthiest countries, and in the global economy as a whole, is
    "degrowth".

 2. We define degrowth as a voluntary transition towards a just,
    participatory, and ecologically sustainable society.

 3. The objectives of degrowth are to meet basic human needs and
    ensure a high quality of life, while reducing the ecological
    impact of the global economy to a sustainable level, equitably
    distributed between nations. This will not be achieved by
    involuntary economic contraction.

 4. Degrowth requires a transformation of the global economic system
    and of the policies promoted and pursued at the national level, to
    allow the reduction and ultimate eradication of absolute poverty
    to proceed as the global economy and unsustainable national
    economies degrow.

 5. Once right-sizing has been achieved through the process of
    degrowth, the aim should be to maintain a "steady state economy"
    with a relatively stable, mildly fluctuating level of consumption.

 6. In general, the process of degrowth is characterised by:

  -- an emphasis on quality of life rather than quantity of
     consumption;

  -- the fulfilment of basic human needs for all;

  -- societal change based on a range of diverse individual and
     collective actions and policies;

  -- substantially reduced dependence on economic activity, and an
     increase in free time, unremunerated activity, conviviality,
     sense of community, and individual and collective health;

  -- encouragement of self-reflection, balance, creativity,
     flexibility, diversity, good citizenship, generosity, and
     non-materialism;

  -- observation of the principles of equity, participatory democracy,
     respect for human rights, and respect for cultural differences.


 7. Progress towards degrowth requires immediate steps towards efforts
    to mainstream the concept of degrowth into parliamentary and
    public debate and economic institutions; the development of
    policies and tools for the practical implementation of degrowth;
    and development of new, non-monetary indicators (including
    subjective indicators) to identify, measure and compare the
    benefits and costs of economic activity, in order to assess
    whether changes in economic activity contribute to or undermine
    the fulfilment of social and environmental objectives.




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