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Crisis? Which Crisis?
A recent EU study headed by a Deutsche bank economist reveals
that
global economic loss through deforestation is vastly greater than
economic loss through the current crisis in the world’s banks (Nature
loss 'dwarfs bank crisis', BBC Online, 10 October). The study puts the
estimated annual loss at between 2 and $5 trillion.
Graphs of consumption or growth trends almost all follow a
hockey-stick
trend, largely flat for a thousand years until 1900 and thereafter
rising rapidly to nearly vertical today. These trends include
consumption of water, paper, rainforest, ozone, fisheries, and
increases of motor car production, population, CO2 and global
temperature, and species extinction. Not surprisingly, the trend for
GDP follows the same pattern.
This is capitalism’s normal modus operandi, regardless of banking
crises. This relentless consumer-driven growth goes on year in year
out, without respite, and the trends climb higher and higher with no
end in sight. The world is burning itself out in an apparently
unstoppable quest for economic growth, and nobody seems able to do
anything about it.
Scientists can only do so much by reporting the facts. For
instance,
they can show that the Earth can sustainably support just 200 million
people in a North American lifestyle, a figure which is not even large
to account for North America’s present population. In answer to the
much-loved argument that growth is the only way to lift the poor out of
poverty, they can point to the fact that, during the 1990’s, the poor’s
share of this growth was just 0.6 percent. According to this argument,
for the poor to be even marginally better off, the rich have to become
stupendously richer, so that “to get the poorest onto an income of just
$3 per day would require an impossible 15 planets’ worth of
biocapacity” (New Scientist, 18 October).
Governments of course are very good at ignoring facts they don’t
like.
One scientist, Tim Jackson, professor of sustainable development at
Surrey University, was accused by a UK treasury official of ‘wanting to
go back and live in caves’. Herman Daly, formerly senior economist for
the World Bank, describes how the first draft of its 1992 World
Development Report contained a diagram showing the economy as a simple
rectangle, with an arrow going into it, labelled ‘inputs’ and another
coming out labelled ‘outputs’. When he pointed out that this implied
that the inputs (resources etc) appeared to be coming from nowhere and
the outputs (including waste) going nowhere, thus suggesting that the
environment had infinite productive and absorptive capacities, the
diagram was simply removed altogether from the draft. He remarks dryly
that ‘mainstream economists are mostly concerned with the [economic]
organism’s circulatory system … while tending to ignore its digestive
system.” (New Scientist, ibid).
The problem is that when scientists, for all the right reasons,
try to
get political, they don’t seem to realise that they are in serious
danger of reinventing wheels and using them to cycle over old ground.
Worryingly, they show under-informed prejudices that any socialist can
hear any night down their local boozer, to wit, that a global
revolution against capitalism is utterly out of the question, and that
even if it wasn’t, it would be utterly undesirable.
Here’s Susan George
on wealth ownership: “Must we organise world revolution … to save
Earth? Is there a single point of attack? If so, tell me the name of
the tsar… Nor would anyone welcome the political systems that shrouded
those vast areas where revolution did occur. Somehow… we need a third
way between red-in-tooth-and-claw capitalism and a worldwide uprising
as unlikely as it is utopian.” Showing a similar knee-jerk horror of
what he imagines socialism to be, Yale environmentalist Gus Speth: “I’m
not advocating state socialism, but I am advocating a non-socialist
alternative to today’s capitalism”, while Daly maintains that “shifting
from growth to development doesn’t have to mean freezing in the dark
under communist tyranny.” (New Scientist, ibid).
So, having written off as utopia or tyranny any possibility of an
alternative to the capitalist system, they are driven of course to
consider how best to modify the system from within. What they are
left with is a mishmash of reforms which have either been tried in the
past (Keynesian inflationary investment), are even more utopian than
the ‘utopians’ (scientists as technocrats dispensing orders to the
wealth class), or contradict the internal boom-slump logic of
capitalism (zero-growth ‘steady state’ capitalism), or would bankrupt
by capital flight any country which first introduced them (various
taxes). At best, the reforms wouldn’t work. At worst, they could
accelerate armageddon. If capitalism really could be run more equitably
and sustainably, don’t they imagine that it would already be running
that way? No, they don’t. They just seem to think that the correct
solutions have somehow eluded the rest of us because we’re not as smart
as they are.
Still, all in all, it is undoubtedly a good thing that scientists
are
turning their attention to the question of free-market capitalism. They
do at least have more credibility than politicians, priests or
pop-idols, and one can only hope they don’t squander it by failing to
sort through their various ill-conceived assumptions and prejudices.
After all, that’s what the scientific method is supposed to be all
about. The worst and most absurd assumption of all was always that
science was somehow above politics, and that seems to be changing. What
scientists need to do now however is recognise that they are latecomers
to the political and economic debate, and that it is unhelpful to cloud
the issues with careless ignorance of genuine socialist ideas, or to
promote unworkable and possibly dangerous solutions which ignore
capitalism’s known behaviour. Most of all, they would do well to
recognise the importance of class in the debate, and their own class
position as workers. If they don’t do that, they are always going to be
so far behind other workers that they think they’re in the lead.

The original hockey stick. Figure 1(b) from the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change Third Assessment Report, 2001
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