Unit 13
Unit 13
Sustainable
Development
Structure
13.0 Objectives
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Economic Growth and Sustainable Development
13.2.1 Economic Growth and Development
13.2.2 Environment in the History of Economic Thought
13.2.3 Implications of Growth on Environment
13.2.4 Sustainable Development: A Global Objective
13.3 Perspectives on Sustainable Development
13.3.1 The Economic Perspective
13.3.2 The Ecological Perspective
13.3.3 The Social Perspective
13.3.4 A Synthesis of Perspectives
13.4 Approaches to Sustainable Development
13.4.1 Weak Sustainability
13.4.2 Strong Sustainability
13.5 Sustainability Rules
13.5.1 Valuation of Environmental Goods and Services
13.5.2 Hartwick’s Rule
13.5.3 Daly’s Operational Principles
13.5.4 Rules for Natural Capital
13.6 Measuring Sustainability
13.6.1 Green National Accounts
13.6.2 Genuine Savings
13.6.3 Other Sustainability Indicators
13.7 Let Us Sum Up
13.8 Key Words
13.9 Some Useful Books and References
13.10 Answers/Hints to Check Your Progress Exercises
13.0 OBJECTIVES
After reading this unit, you will be able to:
• define the concept of sustainable development;
• outline the recognition accorded to environment as an important factor of
production by historical economic theorists;
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Dr. Anindita Roy Saha, I. P. College, DU, Delhi. 209
Sustainable • discuss the implication of economic growth on the quality of
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environmental degradation;
• outline the perspective of sustainable development in terms of its
economic, ecological, social and synthetic perspectives;
• explain the ‘concept of sustainability’ distinguished for its ‘weak’ and
‘strong’ components;
• discuss the ‘rules of sustainability’ in terms of its various rules and
principles; and
• describe the different ‘measures of sustainability’ in terms of its two
practical approaches viz. ‘green accounting’ and ‘genuine savings’.
13.1 INTRODUCTION
The unit deals with the concept of sustainable development. The two
concepts of economic growth and development provides us a background for
understanding the broader concept of sustainability addressed in this unit.
Besides the economic perspective to sustainability, there are other
perspectives like ecological and social, which also need to be synthesised in
order to understand the multi-dimensional concept of ‘sustainable
development’. Further, the concept of sustainability is global in nature but
carry implications at national level. Sustainable development, therefore,
needs to be understood in terms of the treatment of the nation’s ‘natural
capital stock’ (of which environment is an integral component) which forms
the base for investment and hence economic growth. Depending on the two
main types of capital viz. man-made capital and natural capital, the focus
would be on maintaining the capital stock, both in the aggregate as well as at
the two individual levels.
Against this background, the unit discusses the sustainability rules and its
linkage to the role of government in policy formulation. Depending on the
policy focus, the policies would cover areas such as: optimal rate of
extraction and usage of renewable and non-renewable resources, control and
treatment of pollutants, etc. Methods of measuring sustainability, adjustments
required in the estimation of national income accounts (to include non-market
factors like environmental variables), approach to construction of economic
performance indicators like green accounting, genuine savings, etc. are
discussed in the unit. A comprehensive idea of sustainable development
along with discussions on its perspectives, rules, approaches and measures
are thus the aspects covered from an analytical perspective in this unit.
Even though HDI is an improvement over GNP, neither GNP nor HDI
accounts for environmental degradation. However, economy and
environment have such important bearing on each other that growth in one
can be at the cost of the other. For instance, if there is high ambient pollution,
peoples’ well-being will decrease while the economy’s cost of cleaning up
would increase. As a result, GNP would increase due to the activities in the
cleaning-up industry, but at the cost of the health of the population. Given
this striking reality, it is interesting to examine how such an important
component (viz. environment) has been accorded significance by the ancient
economic thinkers and what are the turning points in the course of historical
growth processes, which have led to ‘environment’ being accorded the kind
of significance that it has come to occupy today. We do this in Sub-section
13.2.2 below.
Check Your Progress 1 [answer within the space given in about 50-100
words]
1) What is economic growth? What are the two factors that contributes to
this growth?
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3) What are the three factors whose improvement over time signifies
‘economic development’?
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5) How is HDI a better measure over GNP? Yet, what is a common limiting
feature of both these measures?
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6) How can rising GNP be a misleading indicator of the welfare of people?
Give illustration.
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7) To which historical economic thinker the credit of having associated
‘environment’ as a scarce resource can be attributed? Who are some of
the other early thinkers whose contribution is recognisable in this regard?
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Sustainable 8) In what respect does the Environmental Kuznets Hypothesis provides an
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answer to the concern of rising incomes with degrading environmental
quality?
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• Social sustainability aims at distributional equity and provision of social Sustainable
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services including health and education. These objectives make
sustainability a multi-dimensional concept and a challenge to optimise
and balance. Different approaches may be taken and different methods
may be adopted to measure different dimensions of sustainability.
The above sustainability rule for natural capital is different from the standard
neo-classical approach in which there is no reason to conserve natural capital.
The well-known Hartwick Rule states that consumption may remain constant
or increase with decline in non-renewable resources if the proceeds from
these resources are re-invested in reproducible capital. Therefore,
maintenance of any stock of natural capital is not necessary. In the Solow-
Hartwick approach, man-made and natural capital are substitutable. The
opposite view assumes complementarity in general and substitutability in the
margins. Thus, given that natural capital has irreplaceable importance, the
approach of neo-classical economic efficiency does not suffice for
sustainability.
While some issues may be dealt with the neo-classical ideas of market
efficiency, there are others like ‘natural capital’ requiring the use of the ‘safe
minimum’ approach to protect natural resources and their environmental
functions. Such a concept can be applied to intergenerational fairness
following which society can chalk out actions that are acceptable in terms of
environmental sustainability. This brings-in issues related to moral
imperatives, public decision making and formation of social values. Viewed
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Sustainable from this standpoint, sustainability goes beyond the neo-classical economic
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framework calling for a broader interdisciplinary perspective.
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13.4.2 Strong Sustainability
The other interpretation of sustainability views sustainability (in terms of the
non-diminishing characteristic) to be achieved by conserving the stock of all
four components of production viz. human capital, natural resources capital,
environmental quality and technological capability. According to this
approach, minimum amounts of different types of capital should be
independently maintained in real physical form. The underlying argument is
that natural resources are essential inputs in economic production,
consumption and welfare and hence cannot be substituted by manufactured
and/or human capital. In other words, environmental components are unique.
The environmental processes are irreversible and therefore not substitutable.
Check Your Progress 2 [answer within the space given in about 50-100
words]
1) What is the central feature that distinguishes between the economic and
environmental perspectives of sustainable development?
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3) What are the two policy objectives in terms of which the economic Sustainable
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perspective of sustainable development can be operationalised?
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Sustainable 8) What is the basic assumption behind the Hartwick-Solow concept of
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sustainability’ making it less rigorous (weak) as compared to the concept
of ‘Hicksian sustainability’?
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10) State the reasons as to why the concept of ‘very strong sustainability’ is
regarded untenable.
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This idea has two limitations: (i) it assumes that utility depends on
consumption and environment is important only as an input for production;
and (ii) this rule works only when the different forms of capital are
substitutes to each other which is not so in reality.
• Controls: Daly advocated tight quality controls over and above price
controls to check increasing threats to human welfare.
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There could be many variants of the above equation. However, since one Sustainable
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needs to aggregate over many types of renewable and non-renewable
resources and pollutants, the adjustments will be correct if the price and cost
figures come from ‘competitive and dynamically optimal’ use of resources.
Though there is a debate over green GDP as a sustainability indicator, it does
show the way to modify the traditional economic approach to incorporate the
ecological and social perspectives with that of the economic perspective.
GS = S – Dm – Dn
where GS: gross saving; S: Total saving; Dm: depreciation in man-made
capital; Dn: depreciation in natural capital.
The calculation of natural capital depreciation is similar to that of the
environmental adjustments in GDP in that it includes all the components
valued in the same way. To make the calculations more complete, changes in
the stock of human capital can also be included. The genuine savings
approach is based on the weak sustainability principle because it assumes
substitutability of the different types of capital. It also tests whether a country
on an average is following the Hartwick rule or not. Genuine savings and
green GDP are derived from the same underlying theory. However, as has
been observed empirically, they need not send the same signals.
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Sustainable 2) What are the four components of Daly’s principles? In particular, what is
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the limitation of his proposal on ‘pollutants’?
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4) State the equation for estimation of Green GDP specifying its different
components.
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Sustainable 4) Thomas, J. M. and Callan, S. J., (2007). Environmental Economics,
Development
Thomson India Edition.
5) Kolstad, C., (2011). Intermediate Environmental Economics, Oxford
University Press, India edition.
6) Bromley, D. W., (1995). Handbook of Environmental Economics,
Blackwell.
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