Inequality, Sustainability and the Greed Line: A Conceptual and Empirical Approach on Ecuador and Latin America
This essay suggests a greed line which controls the maximum ethically and economically acceptable consumption level, beyond which, a partial redistribution of individual income can eliminate poverty and restitute the economy to its sustainable size. Current economic growth allows a consumption level...
Saved in:
主要作者: | |
---|---|
格式: | article |
语言: | spa |
出版: |
2012
|
主题: | |
在线阅读: | https://revistas.uasb.edu.ec/index.php/comentario/article/view/65 |
标签: |
添加标签
没有标签, 成为第一个标记此记录!
|
总结: | This essay suggests a greed line which controls the maximum ethically and economically acceptable consumption level, beyond which, a partial redistribution of individual income can eliminate poverty and restitute the economy to its sustainable size. Current economic growth allows a consumption level well beyond our basic needs, however, large social inequalities inhibit at least 40% of the population from fulfilling their basic human needs, whereas, sumptuary consumption absorbs a significant part of the world product, and the size of the global economy has overtaken our planets replenishment capacity. The opulence line may be constant in a specific historical or national context, however, it is variable for different regional scales or time periods; its decreases as inequality or poverty increase, or as unsustainable global economic growth in-creases; finally, it increases as growth becomes more sustainable or equitable. |
---|