The Growth Illusion: How Economic Growth Has Enriched the Few, Impoverished the Many, and Endangered the PlanetCouncil Oak Books, 1993 - 367 من الصفحات The premise of this book is that economic growth has made life considerably worse for people in Britain since 1955 and that, even if growth were beneficial at one stage in human history, it is now damaging. The book presents evidence of social and environmental damage caused by growth and several reasons for a persistence of growth in the face of this damage. It is proposed that the real reason growth has not been stopped is that economic systems would collapse if it did. The book looks at the effects of a policy of growth before and after the 1950s, how growth has effected national health and damaged family and community life, and the effects of growth on the environment (see especially chapter 11: "Growth in the Greenhouse"). Included is an examination of how the need for growth forces companies to adopt new technologies before their impact on the environment can be assessed, how politicians are more concerned about maintaining conditions in which economic growth is possible than holding the world's climate unchanged, the myth of sustainable growth, and a lack of morality governing the direction of economic change. A solution is proposed that involves adjusting the capitalist system. (LZ) |
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الصفحة 41
... death rate was 39.2 per thousand . This is equivalent to the death rate today in a population consisting entirely of 65 to 74 - year - old men . In Liverpool , the average age was very much lower probably well under thirty . In theory ...
... death rate was 39.2 per thousand . This is equivalent to the death rate today in a population consisting entirely of 65 to 74 - year - old men . In Liverpool , the average age was very much lower probably well under thirty . In theory ...
الصفحة 105
... death rates among rich countries . ' We are not dealing with the effects of residual poverty in the developed world - there are too few people in absolute poverty in each of the developed countries for their death rates to be the ...
... death rates among rich countries . ' We are not dealing with the effects of residual poverty in the developed world - there are too few people in absolute poverty in each of the developed countries for their death rates to be the ...
الصفحة 175
... death rate which cut food production and increased the death rate still more . And if pollution was successfully cut by 75 per cent so that the death rate did not rise so rapidly , then population continued to grow until all the world's ...
... death rate which cut food production and increased the death rate still more . And if pollution was successfully cut by 75 per cent so that the death rate did not rise so rapidly , then population continued to grow until all the world's ...
المحتوى
Foreword by Edward Goldsmith | 1 |
Quality or Quantity? | 15 |
Growth and the National Health | 96 |
حقوق النشر | |
10 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
agricultural Amish average banks benefits better Britain British capital carbon dioxide cause cent century CFCs consequences consumption cost countries damage decline Dublin economic growth economists effect emissions energy England environment environmental exports fact factors farm farmers fertilizer figures firms fish fossil fuel global global warming greenhouse greenhouse effect grow growth process higher human improved increase India industrial inflation interest rates investment Ireland Irish J. K. Galbraith labour land less limited Limits to Growth living London Luddites manufacturers ment million monetarized national income nomic OECD output ozone Penguin pesticides policies pollution population poverty problem production profits reduced result rise salmon sector social society soil things tion tonnes trade unem unemployed unemployment village wages welfare women workers wrote