NY Times, June 19 2015
Championing Environment, Francis Takes Aim at Global Capitalism
By CORAL DAVENPORT

WASHINGTON — The encyclical on the environment that Pope Francis 
released on Thursday is as much an indictment of the global economic 
order as it is an argument for the world to confront climate change.

It offers blistering criticism of 21st-century capitalism, expressing 
skepticism about market forces, criticizing consumerism and cautioning 
about the costs of growth.

But where Francis’ environmental and economic agendas meet, he leaves 
something of a paradox, and ammunition potentially for both sides in the 
debate over how to address climate change.

While urging swift action to curb the burning of fossil fuels that have 
powered economies since the Industrial Revolution, he also condemns the 
trading of carbon-emission credits, saying it merely creates new forms 
of financial speculation and does not bring about “radical change.” But 
carbon trading is the policy most widely adopted by governments to 
combat climate change, and it has been endorsed by leading economists as 
a way to cut carbon pollution while sustaining economic growth.

The approach has taken on increased importance in the push for 
governments to sign a United Nations climate change accord in Paris in 
December that would commit every nation to enacting ambitious policies 
to cut their use of fossil fuels.

Francis’ encyclical also amplifies the argument that rich countries 
should shoulder the economic burden of cutting emissions, an issue that 
has blocked progress in global climate change negotiations for years.

While environmentalists around the world praised the document, some of 
its core messages could give pause to environmental economists and 
negotiators who have sought to find a path to a new United Nations 
accord that is politically palatable to major economies and corporations.

In particular, environmental economists criticized the encyclical’s 
condemnation of carbon trading, seeing it as part of a radical critique 
of market economies.

“I respect what the pope says about the need for action, but this is out 
of step with the thinking and the work of informed policy analysts 
around the world, who recognize that we can do more, faster, and better 
with the use of market-based policy instruments — carbon taxes and/or 
cap-and-trade systems,” Robert N. Stavins, the director of the 
environmental economics program at Harvard, said in an email.

The approach by the pope, an Argentine who is the first pontiff from the 
developing world, is similar to that of a “small set of socialist Latin 
American countries that are opposed to the world economic order, fearful 
of free markets, and have been utterly dismissive and uncooperative in 
the international climate negotiations,” Dr. Stavins said.

Francis’ embrace of the issue of climate change, and his broader 
critique of global capitalism, stem from his signature economic concern: 
eradicating poverty. He has won wide popularity, particularly on his 
home continent, for an economic agenda focused on the poor.

Over the past two years, the global development institutions most 
focused on addressing poverty — including the World Bank, the African 
Development Bank and the Asian Development Bank — have published 
economic research identifying climate change as a leading driver of 
poverty, contributing to rising sea levels that harm coastal areas in 
Southeast Asia, causing crop failure in Africa, and driving a slowdown 
in growth across the developing world. That research has informed the 
pope’s focus on climate change.

In the encyclical, Francis writes of “the intimate relationship between 
the poor and the fragility of the planet,” and says, “Both everyday 
experience and scientific research show that the gravest effects of all 
attacks on the environment are suffered by the poorest.”

Jim Yong Kim, the president of the World Bank, praised the document. 
“Today’s release of Pope Francis’ first encyclical should serve as a 
stark reminder to all of us of the intrinsic link between climate change 
and poverty,” he said.

He added, “As the effects of climate change worsen, we know that 
escaping poverty will become even more difficult.”

Francis has sought to use his moral authority to press for changes to 
economic policy, and environmentalists hope it will add weight to his 
push on climate change.

But the encyclical’s criticism of market forces, and its references to 
sacrificing economic growth to protect the environment, could have the 
unintended consequence of strengthening the arguments of opponents of 
climate change policy.

“Humanity is called to recognize the need for changes of lifestyle, 
production and consumption, in order to combat this warming or at least 
the human causes which produce or aggravate it,” the pope wrote. “At one 
extreme, we find those who doggedly uphold the myth of progress and tell 
us that ecological problems will solve themselves simply with the 
application of new technology and without any need for ethical 
considerations or deep change.”

For years, opponents of climate change policy have argued that a global 
push to cut fossil fuel pollution will impede economic growth, 
particularly in poor countries that are heavily dependent on cheap 
fossil fuels.

Francis’ encyclical could give ammunition to that argument, which is 
being pressed by Republicans in Congress and on the presidential 
campaign trail. But some liberal policy experts say the document aims to 
weaken that case.

“He’s rather brilliantly brought back a concept that has been lost for 
30 years or so, since the beginning of the Reagan administration — he 
says profit-making can’t be the sole criteria for decision-making,” said 
Jay Hakes, a historian who focuses on energy issues and was a top energy 
official in the administration of Jimmy Carter. “The pope’s ideas will 
be jarring to a modern reader at first. He says that people should not 
ascribe to the market magical qualities that can solve all problems.”

While the pope’s arguments against markets are likely to play poorly in 
Washington, they could play well in Latin American nations, especially 
Brazil. That nation, one of the world’s largest polluters, has a 
majority Roman Catholic population and has resisted devising an 
aggressive climate change policy, in part because of its struggles with 
poverty.

Internationally, advocates of climate change policy, including many 
economists, have pushed government efforts to put a price on carbon 
pollution, either with a tax or a cap-and-trade program, in which 
governments charge a fee to carbon polluters, and industry and market 
players can buy and sell carbon credits among themselves. That system is 
in place in Europe, California, several Northeastern states, and some 
parts of Canada and China.

The government of China, the world’s largest polluter, is moving toward 
a national cap-and-trade system. Advocates of a United Nations climate 
deal have encouraged governments to link their systems and bring others 
into the fold. But Francis’ critique of that system, if it resonates 
with governments, could hinder the efforts to expand cap-and-trade measures.

The pope said several times that developed economies owed a debt to poor 
nations. “A true ‘ecological debt’ exists, particularly between the 
global north and south, connected to commercial imbalances with effects 
on the environment, and the disproportionate use of natural resources by 
certain countries over long periods of time,” he said.

That rich-poor divide has long stood in the way of successful climate 
change negotiations, with developing nations such as India refusing in 
the past to enact policies without promises of aid from wealthy nations. 
But the aim of the December summit meeting is to commit every country, 
rich and poor, to plans that cut emissions.
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