Chapter 25
Changing Direction: Introduction

The last chapter of Part 1, Chapter 24, described the near future we can expect if we continue to let uncontrolled market forces largely determine the level of production and the sorts of products that are made ... and it’s a bleak prospect.

Reacting to the latest findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the UN Secretary-General insisted that unless governments everywhere reassess their energy policies, the world will be uninhabitable. Unless action is taken soon, some major cities will be under water, Mr. Guterres said in a message, which also forecast “unprecedented heatwaves, terrifying storms, widespread water shortages and the extinction of a million species of plants and animals”. – from United Nations News.[34]

PIC

Figure 25.1: “some major cities will be under water”. [WMC]

We now move on from the analysis of the existing market economy laid out in Part 1 and turn to look at ways in which we could change direction and head for a rather better future than the one we appear to be facing. In an overpopulated world that is undergoing a storm of technological change, and on top of everything else is armed to the teeth, improving the outlook won’t be easy. Yet humanity ought to be able to do so much more if we could only set our mind to it. Of course ‘setting our mind to it’ is a major part of the problem, and we shall need to modify structures and incentives so that we are encouraged along a new path rather than battling a headwind every step of the way. Key will be changing the way our economy works so that we are in control of the market rather than letting the market control us. So the chapters that follow contain policy suggestions based on the economic analysis in Part 1. They assume that to achieve a better world, the goals of policy should be:

Most people probably share these goals, although of course not everyone does. If your aim was to be fabulously wealthy and lord it over the impoverished but cowed masses, in a world that is fast becoming arid and lifeless, then there is nothing to stop you from using the economic analysis in this book to design some very different policies (although I hope you won’t).

I should emphasise that while the chapters to come will contain policy ideas, they do not provide or pretend to provide, a detailed set of proposals that are feasible in legal, political and financial terms. That is a challenge for all of us.

25.1 The Logic

The logic of the policies that will be described in the next chapters is summarised here as a set of requirements. All of those requirements follow from this first statement:

It is essential to moderate human impact on the environment

Note: an environmentally sustainable world is put as our overarching requirement because on a dead planet ‘fairness’ is meaningless. Humans have survived under all sorts of horrible regimes – while there’s life there’s hope. However, below we shall add the second goal of a fairer world as being necessary to achieve the first, as well as something we would wish for.

It follows that ...

25.2 Policy Overview

Based on the above requirements, a set of policy suggestions are listed in the bullet points below, aimed at achieving or at least moving towards the desired fairer and more environmentally sustainable world. In the chapters that follow these ideas are explored one by one, and the reasoning behind them explained.

25.3 Summary

Unrestrained market forces are provoking environmental damage and levels of inequality that endanger humanity. A change of direction is urgently needed. This chapter proposed two main goals – an environmentally sustainable world and a fairer world – and derived some requirements from those goals.

Based on those requirements and the economic analysis in Part 1 of this book, a set of policy ideas were then outlined. The next three chapters discuss the suggested policies.