507 research outputs found

    An Evolutionary Economic Analysis of Energy Transitions

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    Evolutionary economics offers clear insights into the mechanisms that underlie innovations, structural change and transitions. It is therefore of great value for the framing of policies aimed at fostering a transition to a sustainable development. This paper offers an overview of the main insights of evolutionary economics and derives core concepts, namely ‘diversity’, ‘innovation’, ‘selection environment’, ‘bounded rationality’, ‘path dependence and lock-in’, and ‘coevolution’. These concepts are subsequently used to formulate guidelines for the role of the government and the design of public policies, such as the learning from historical technological pathways and the creation of an extended level playing field. In addition, the developments of certain energy technologies are examined in detail within the adopted evolutionary economics framework. Three particular technologies received attention, namely fuel cells, nuclear fusion, and photovoltaic cells.

    Agrowth

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    This comprehensive Dictionary brings together an extensive range of definitive terms in ecological economics. Assembling contributions from distinguished scholars, it provides an intellectual map to this evolving subject ranging from the practical to the philosophical.</p

    Subvencions holandeses ocultes, un risc mediambiental

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    En els debats sobre política mediambiental, la necessitat d'eliminar les subvencions mediambientalment nocives ha rebut poca atenció. Aquestes subvencions solen augmentar la grandària i la intensitat de la contaminació de les activitats econòmiques, sovint sense una clara compensació dels beneficis socials. L'impacte ambiental de les subvencions directes, o en el pressupost, ha estat àmpliament reconegut. Però les subvencions indirectes o fora de pressupost (no visibles en els pressupostos del govern) són almenys igual d'importants. La investigació realitzada sobre aquest tema és escassa, però aquest estudi mostra els resultats de les emissions de gasos d'efecte hivernacle (GEH) i dels acidificantes derivats de les subvencions fora de pressupost als Països Baixos i, en particular, mostren que els subsidis en l'agricultura, l'energia i els transports contribueixen de manera important a les emissions de GEH. Una política climàtica eficaç, per tant, ha de considerar l'eliminació de les subvencions fora de pressupost.En los debates sobre política medioambiental la necesidad de eliminar las subvenciones medioambientalmente dañinas ha recibido poca atención. Estas subvenciones suelen aumentar el tamaño y la intensidad de la contaminación de las actividades económicas, a menudo sin una clara compensación de los beneficios sociales. El impacto ambiental de las subvenciones directas, o en el presupuesto, ha sido ampliamente reconocido. Pero las subvenciones indirectas o fuera de presupuesto (no visibles en los presupuestos del gobierno) son al menos igual de importantes. La investigación realizada sobre este tema es escasa, pero este estudio muestra los resultados de las emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero (GEI) y de los acidificantes derivados de las subvenciones fuera de presupuesto en los Países Bajos y, en particular, muestran que los subsidios en la agricultura, la energía y los transportes contribuyen de manera importante a las emisiones de GEI. Una política climática eficaz, por tanto, debe considerar la eliminación de las subvenciones fuera de presupuesto.In debates on environmental policy the complementary need for removing environmentally harmful subsidies has received little attention. Such subsidies typically increase the size and pollution intensity of economic activities, often without clear, compensating social benefits. The environmental impact of direct or on-budget subsidies has been well recognized. Indirect or off-budget subsidies, not visible in government budgets, are at least as important. Research on this topic is scarce. This research reports findings on greenhouse gas (GHG) and acidifying emissions arising from off-budget subsidies in the Netherlands and show that subsidies particularly in agriculture, energy and transport contribute importantly to GHG emissions. Effective climate policy therefore needs to consider removal of off-budget subsidies

    Abolishing GDP

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    Expectations and information about the growth of GDP per capita have a large influence on decisions made by private and public economic agents. It will be argued here that GDP (per capita) is far from a robust indicator of social welfare, and that its use as such must be regarded as a serious form of market and government failure. This article presents an update on the most important criticisms of GDP as an indicator of social welfare and economic progress. It further examines the nature and extent of the impact of GDP information on the economy, revisits the customary arguments in favour of the GDP indicator, and critically evaluates proposed alternatives to GDP. The main conclusion is that it is rational to dismiss GDP as an indicator to monitor economic progress and to guide public policy. As is clarified, this conclusion does not imply a plea against growth, innovation or national accounting

    Evolutionary Analysis of the Relationship between Economic Growth, Environmental Quality and Resource Scarcity

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    This discussion paper has resulted in a chapter in: (R.U. Ayres, D. Simpson, and M. Toman (eds.)), Scarcity and Growth in the Millennium, 2005, Resources for the Future, Washington DC, 177-97

    A procedure for globally institutionalizing a 'beyond-GDP' metric

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    Altres ajuts: Acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICUnidad de excelencia María de Maeztu CEX2019-000940-MIf governments are serious about meeting environmental and social goals, they should overcome dominance of the GDP indicator in political discourse. Institutionalizing a beyond-GDP metric would be an essential step, in interaction with a shift in the direction of an "agrowth" paradigm. For a significant step forward, a permanent UN panel could be charged to explore the options and prepare a metric for global implementation. This essay outlines the choice spectrum and provides criteria and guidelines for the metric-selection process. It is suggested that the panel considers four critical dimensions of potential alternatives, namely means versus ends, objective versus subjective information, aggregate index versus multiple indicators, and monetary versus other units. In deciding about each dimension, serious attention needs to be given to the psychological-communicative appeal of the resulting options, so as to guarantee a fluent uptake of the selected beyond-GDP metric in society, media and politics. The combined environmental and inequality crises at national and global scales make this the right time to finally translate a respectable history of beyond-GDP thinking into practical action

    Evolutionary macroeconomic assessment of employment and innovation impacts of climate policy packages

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    Climate policy has been mainly studied with economic models that assume representative, rational agents. Such policy aims, though, at changing carbon-intensive consumption and production patterns driven by bounded rationality and other-regarding preferences, such as status and imitation. To examine climate policy under such alternative behavioral assumptions, we develop a model tool by adapting an existing general-purpose macroeconomic multi-agent model. The resulting tool allows testing various climate policies in terms of combined climate and economic performance. The model is particularly suitable to address the distributional impacts of climate policies, not only because populations of many agents are included, but also as these are composed of different classes of households. The approach accounts for two types of innovations, which improve either the carbon or labor intensity of production. We simulate policy scenarios with distinct combinations of carbon taxation, a reduction of labor taxes, subsidies for green innovation, a price subsidy to consumers for less carbon-intensive products, and green government procurement. The results show pronounced differences with those obtained by rational-agent model studies. It turns out that a supply-oriented subsidy for green innovation, funded by the revenues of a carbon tax, results in a significant reduction of carbon emissions without causing negative effects on em ployment. On the contrary, demand-oriented subsidies for adopting greener technologies, funded in the same manner, result in either none or considerably less re- duction of carbon emissions and may even lead to higher unemployment. Our study also contributes insight on a potential double dividend of shifting taxes from labor to carbon

    An Evolutionary Economic Analysis of Energy Transitions

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    Evolutionary economics offers clear insights into the mechanisms that underlie innovations, structural change and transitions. It is therefore of great value for the framing of policies aimed at fostering a transition to a sustainable development. This paper offers an overview of the main insights of evolutionary economics and derives core concepts, namely 'diversity', 'innovation', 'selection environment', 'bounded rationality', 'path dependence and lock-in', and 'coevolution'. These concepts are subsequently used to formulate guidelines for the role of the government and the design of public policies, such as the learning from historical technological pathways and the creation of an extended level playing field. In addition, the developments of certain energy technologies are examined in detail within the adopted evolutionary economics framework. Three particular technologies received attention, namely fuel cells, nuclear fusion, and photovoltaic cells

    Methods to Assess Costs of Drought Damages and Policies for Drought Mitigation and Adaptation: Review and Recommendations

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    This article examines available methods for assessing all types of drought costs, including both damage costs and costs arising from adopting policy measures to encourage mitigation of, and adaptation to, droughts. It first discusses damage costs, distinguishing between direct, indirect and non-market costs. Then it examines the suitability of existing methods for estimating drought costs in different economic sectors, their underlying theoretical assumptions, complementarity between different methods, and conditions relevant for their application. The latter include precision, ability to deal with future climate change risks, data needs and availability, and required financial and human resources. The article further considers potential policies for drought mitigation and adaptation and different cost types associated with them. It ends with providing recommendations for good practices regarding the use of methods as well as drought mitigation and adaptation policie

    What explains public support for climate policies? A review of empirical and experimental studies.

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    Política de acceso abierto tomada de: https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/12766The lack of broad public support prevents the implementation of effective climate policies. This article aims to examine why citizens support or reject climate policies. For this purpose, we provide a cross-disciplinary overview of empirical and experimental research on public attitudes and preferences that has emerged in the last few years. The various factors influencing policy support are divided into three general categories: (1) social-psychological factors and climate change perception, such as the positive influences of left-wing political orientation, egalitarian worldviews, environmental and self-transcendent values, climate change knowledge, risk perception, or emotions like interest and hope; (2) the perception of climate policy and its design, which includes, among others, the preference of pull over push measures, the positive role of perceived policy effectiveness, the level of policy costs, as well as the positive effect of perceived policy fairness and the recycling of potential policy revenues; (3) contextual factors, such as the positive influence of social trust, norms and participation, wider economic, political and geographical aspects, or the different effects of specific media events and communications. Finally, we discuss the findings and provide suggestions for future research
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