Everything Must Go
By George Monbiot
Economic growth will
destroy everything. There’s no way of greening it – we need a new system.
Everyone wants everything – how is that going to work? The
promise of economic growth is that the poor can live like the rich and the rich
can live like the oligarchs. But already we are bursting through the physical
limits of the planet that sustains us. Climate breakdown, soil loss, the
collapse of habitats and species, the sea of plastic, insectageddon: all are
driven by rising consumption. The promise of private luxury for everyone cannot
be met: neither the physical nor the ecological space exists.
But growth must go on: this is everywhere the political
imperative. And we must adjust our tastes accordingly. In the name of autonomy
and choice, marketing uses the latest findings in neuroscience to break down
our defences. Those who seek to resist must, like the Simple Lifers in Brave
New World, be silenced – in this case by the media. With every generation, the
baseline of normalised consumption shifts. Thirty years ago, it was ridiculous
to buy bottled water, where tap water is clean and abundant. Today, worldwide,
we use a million plastic bottles a minute.
Every Friday is a Black Friday, every Christmas a more
garish festival of destruction. Among the snow saunas, portable watermelon
coolers and smart phones for dogs with which we are urged to fill our lives, my
#extremecivilisation prize now goes to the PancakeBot: a 3-D batter printer
that allows you to eat the Mona Lisa or the Taj Mahal or your dog’s bottom
every morning. In practice, it will clog up your kitchen for a week until you
decide you don’t have room for it. For junk like this we’re trashing the living
planet, and our own prospects of survival. Everything must go.
The ancillary promise is that, through green consumerism, we
can reconcile perpetual growth with planetary survival. But a series of
research papers reveal that there is no significant difference between the
ecological footprints of people who care about their impacts and people who
don’t. One recent article, published in the journal Environment and Behaviour,
finds that those who identify themselves as conscious consumers use more energy
and carbon than those who do not.
Why? Because, environmental awareness tends to be higher
among wealthy people. It is not attitudes that govern our impacts on the
planet, but income. The richer we are, the bigger our footprint, regardless of
our good intentions. Those who see themselves as green consumers, the paper found,
“mainly focus on behaviours that have relatively small benefits.”
I know people who recycle meticulously, save their plastic
bags, carefully measure the water in their kettles, then take their holidays in
the Caribbean, cancelling their environmental savings 100-fold. I’ve come to
believe that the recycling licences their long-haul flights. It persuades
people they’ve gone green, enabling them to overlook their greater impacts.
None of this means that we should not try to reduce our
impacts, but we should be aware of the limits of the exercise. Our behaviour
within the system cannot change the outcomes of the system. It is the system
that needs to change.
Research by Oxfam suggests that the world’s richest 1% (if
your household has an income of £70,000 or more, this means you) produce around
175 times as much carbon as the poorest 10%. How, in a world in which everyone
is supposed to aspire to high incomes, can we avoid turning the Earth, on which
all prosperity depends, into a dust ball?
By decoupling, the economists tell us: detaching economic
growth from our use of materials. So how well is this going? A paper in the
journal PlosOne finds that while in some countries relative decoupling has
occurred, “no country has achieved absolute decoupling during the past 50
years.” What this means is that the amount of materials and energy associated
with each increment of GDP might decline, but, as growth outpaces efficiency,
the total use of resources keeps rising. More importantly, the paper reveals
that, in the long term, both absolute and relative decoupling from the use of
essential resources is impossible, because of the physical limits of
efficiency.
A global growth rate of 3% means that the size of the world
economy doubles every 24 years. This is why environmental crises are
accelerating at such a rate. Yet the plan is to ensure that it doubles and
doubles again, and keeps doubling in perpetuity. In seeking to defend the
living world from the maelstrom of destruction, we might believe we are
fighting corporations and governments and the general foolishness of humankind.
But they are all proxies for the real issue: perpetual growth on a planet that
is not growing.
Those who justify this system insist that economic growth is
essential for the relief of poverty. But a paper in the World Economic Review
finds that the poorest 60% of the world’s people receive only 5% of the
additional income generated by rising GDP. As a result, $111 of growth is
required for every $1 reduction in poverty. This is why, on current trends, it
would take 200 years to ensure that everyone receives $5 a day. By this point,
average per capita income will have reached $1m a year, and the economy will be
175 times bigger than it is today. This is not a formula for poverty relief. It
is a formula for the destruction of everything and everyone.
When you hear that something makes economic sense, this
means it makes the opposite of common sense. Those sensible men and women who
run the world’s treasuries and central banks, who see an indefinite rise in
consumption as normal and necessary, are beserkers, smashing through the
wonders of the living world, destroying the prosperity of future generations to
sustain a set of figures that bear ever less relation to general welfare.
Green consumerism, material decoupling, sustainable growth:
all are illusions, designed to justify an economic model that is driving us to
catastrophe. The current system, based on private luxury and public squalor,
will immiserate us all: under this model, luxury and deprivation are one beast
with two heads.
We need a different system, rooted not in economic
abstractions but in physical realities, that establish the parameters by which
we judge its health. We need to build a world in which growth is unnecessary, a
world of private sufficiency and public luxury. And we must do it before
catastrophe forces our hand.
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