Confronting the dilemma of growth. A response to Warlenius (2023).

Tim Jackson, Jason Hickel, and Giorgos Kallis
Ecological Economics | June 2024

Image: Sculpture by Isaac Cordal; photo by Ferdinand Feys / flickr.com (CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0)

Summary

This commentary responds to a recent article in Ecological Economics purporting to identify ‘limits to degrowth’. We first clarify and set in context the tensions between growth rates and decoupling rates on which the argument is based. In particular, we show how failing to achieve sufficient decoupling appears to leave society torn between missing our climate targets and crashing our economies. This dilemma highlights the tough choices inherent in the climate transition. But it does not imply that critics of growth endorse economic collapse. On the contrary, the intention of postgrowth scholars is clearly to prevent this collapse by offering structural and social reforms, alongside technological options, as a way of meeting climate targets. Specifically we dispute the claim that growth is the best way to achieve high rates of decoupling. Counter to this, we present several mechanisms through which a growth-critical approach may be better aligned with the climate transition than an economic ideology founded on ‘growth at all costs’.

The comment piece is available in open access format via the Science Direct website. If you have difficulties accessing the paper, please get in touch: info@cusp.ac.uk.

Citation

Jackson T, Hickel J and G Kallis 2024. Confronting the dilemma of growth. A response to Warlenius (2023). Ecological Economics, Vol 220. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2023.108089.

Further Reading