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http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/growth_is_the_problem_20120910/
By Chris Hedges
The ceaseless expansion of economic
exploitation, the engine of global capitalism, has come to an end. The
futile and myopic effort to resurrect this expansion—a fallacy embraced
by most economists—means that we respond to illusion rather than
reality. We invest our efforts into bringing back what is gone forever.
This strange twilight moment, in which our experts and systems managers
squander resources in attempting to re-create an expanding economic
system that is moribund, will inevitably lead to systems collapse. The
steady depletion of natural resources, especially fossil fuels, along
with the accelerated pace of climate change, will combine with crippling
levels of personal and national debt to thrust us into a global
depression that will dwarf any in the history of capitalism. And very
few of us are prepared.
“Our solution is our problem,” Richard Heinberg, the author of “The End of Growth: Adapting to Our New Economic Reality,”
told me when I reached him by phone in California. “Its name is growth.
But growth has become uneconomic. We are worse off because of growth.
To achieve growth now means mounting debt, more pollution, an
accelerated loss of biodiversity and the continued destabilization of
the climate. But we are addicted to growth. If there is no growth there
are insufficient tax revenues and jobs. If there is no growth existing
debt levels become unsustainable. The elites see the current economic
crisis as a temporary impediment. They are desperately trying to fix it.
But this crisis signals an irreversible change for civilization itself.
We cannot prevent it. We can only decide whether we will adapt to it or
not.”
Heinberg, a senior fellow at the Post Carbon Institute,
argues that we cannot grasp the real state of the global economy by the
usual metrics—GDP, unemployment, housing, durable goods, national
deficits, personal income and consumer spending—although even these
measures point to severe and chronic problems. Rather, he says, we have
to examine the structural flaws that sit like time bombs embedded within
the economic edifice. U.S. household debt enabled the expansion of
consumer spending during the boom years, he says, but consumer debt
cannot continue to grow as house prices decline to realistic levels.
Toxic assets litter the portfolios of the major banks, presaging another
global financial meltdown. The Earth’s natural resources are being
exhausted. And climate change, with its extreme weather conditions, is
beginning to exact a heavy economic toll on countries, including the
United States, through the destruction brought about by droughts,
floods, wildfires and loss of crop yields. ............................................................................................................................................................................................. go there, there's more.
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