Managing Without Growth Slower by Design, Not Disaster

Managing Without Growth: Slower by Design, Not Disaster by Peter A. Victor, published by Edward Elgar in 2008, presents a critical examination of the prevailing emphasis on economic growth in rich countries. This 260-page book explores the limitations of growth in relation to environmental and resource constraints, the disconnect between income levels and happiness, and the failure of growth to achieve broader economic, social, and environmental goals.
Readers will find that Victor argues for a shift away from growth as the primary objective of economic policy, advocating instead for specific goals that enhance overall wellbeing. The book combines a systems approach with traditional economic analysis, offering insights relevant to discussions on sustainable development and environmental economics. It aims to engage a diverse audience, including academics, students, and activists, by addressing the pressing issues at the intersection of economic development and ecological sustainability.
Official synopsis Publisher
Peter Victor challenges the priority that rich countries continue to give to economic growth as an over-arching objective of economic policy. The challenge is based on a critical analysis of the literature on environmental and resource limits to growth, on the disconnect between higher incomes and happiness, and on the failure of economic growth to meet other key economic, social and environmental policy objectives.
Shortly after World War II, economic growth became the paramount economic policy objective in most countries, a position that it maintains today. This book presents three arguments on why rich countries should turn away from economic growth as the primary policy objective and pursue more specific objectives that enhance wellbeing. The author contends that continued economic growth worldwide is unrealistic due to environmental and resource constraints. If rich countries continue to push growth, poorer countries, where the benefits are more evident, will lag. Rising incomes increase happiness and wellbeing only up to a level that has since been surpassed in rich countries. Moreover, economic growth has not brought full employment, eliminated poverty or reduced the burden of the economy on the environment. By combining a systems approach with more conventional economic analysis, Peter Victor provides new insights into a pressing issue at the frontier of ecological economics in a way that will appeal to a wide audience.
Academics, students, activists and interested lay readers will find this well argued book illuminating and compelling.
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