Freakonomics Radio - 429. Is Economic Growth the Wrong Goal?
Episode Date: August 13, 2020The endless pursuit of G.D.P., argues the economist Kate Raworth, shortchanges too many people and also trashes the planet. Economic theory, she says, “needs to be rewritten” — and Raworth has t...ried, in a book called Doughnut Economics. It has found an audience among reformers, and now the city of Amsterdam is going whole doughnut.
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I grew up on the outskirts of London.
My mom was a florist.
My dad was a businessman.
I didn't really know much about that.
That's Kate Raworth.
I'm a renegade economist, passionate about rewriting economics. It needs to be rewritten.
Let's do it.
Raworth teaches at Oxford University's Environmental Change Institute.
She admits that as a kid, she was a bit sheltered.
I led a, you know, happy, pretty innocent life,
saw the world on the TV news,
and it was much bigger than the world I lived in.
Through that TV screen,
Raworth saw the Ethiopian famine of the early 1980s,
which killed an estimated one million people.
She saw the widening hole in the ozone layer
and other environmental problems.
And I thought economics would be the subject to help me have the tools to help sort it
out.
Boy, were you wrong.
Was I so wrong?
Raworth did go on to study economics at Oxford.
She learned all the foundational knowledge she was asked to learn.
She memorized the diagrams she was asked to memorize.
She felt she had a pretty good grip on basic theories like supply and demand, but she was frustrated. There just was no option to study anything environmental. It didn't exist.
And it gradually began to creep up on me that that was a real problem.
Still, Raworth did get her economics degree, as well as a master's in economics, also from Oxford.
She then went to work as an economist for the government of Zanzibar, for the United Nations,
for the anti-poverty agency Oxfam. Along the way, she finally figured out what had been missing
from her economics education, a focus on humanity and the planet. She began redrawing those economics
diagrams she'd memorized so diligently at university.
Doodling away, she came up with something totally different.
Rather than jagged lines and aggressive arrows,
she came up with a circle inside another circle.
It was essentially a donut.
I know it sounds ridiculous, right? A donut? But within that donut, Raworth saw great promise.
Think of it as a compass for human prosperity in the 21st century.
How does this work?
So imagine a donut, the kind that's got a hole in the middle.
Okay, your standard donut.
And we want everybody to be living in the donut.
I'll be honest, I had a hard time getting the visuals of the donut idea at first, so stick with it.
That means no one is in the hole in the middle where they're falling short on the essentials of
life without food or water, healthcare, housing, education, political voice.
Okay, so the donut is good. The hole is bad.
But at the same time, don't overshoot the outer crust of the donut. So again, the donut itself is good, the safe zone.
But beyond the outer crust...
There we put so much pressure on our planet, we begin to push her out of balance and we cause climate breakdown.
And we acidify the oceans and create a hole in the ozone layer.
So it's a balance.
Meet the needs of all people within the means of the planet.
Donuts are beloved by many people in many places, but rarely are they considered a symbol of balance. And yet, that's how Kate Raworth saw things. In 2017, she published a book called
Donut Economics. It was avidly consumed in certain circles,
especially in places that pay attention
to standard economics,
but feel that standard economics comes up short.
And then came the global COVID-19 pandemic,
a health crisis, an economic catastrophe,
and more rolled into one.
The pandemic has underscored the inequalities
that Raworth was already concerned
with. Inequalities in income, in healthcare access, in the labor markets. Too many people
being pushed toward the donut hole. But the crisis has also threatened progress in the
environmental arena, pushing too much activity beyond the donut's crust. China and Japan,
for instance, have recently approved large numbers
of new coal-burning power plants.
While the COVID crisis was a shock to the system
that no one saw coming,
it has also shown just how vulnerable
our modern economies are.
So today on Freakonomics Radio,
Raworth talks about a new economic framework
whose key feature is sustainability.
How do we create economies that are compatible
with Earth's capacity to regenerate resources and absorb our wastes?
We also hear why, in the middle of the COVID crisis,
the city of Amsterdam has aggressively embraced Raworth's donut model.
The biggest worry that people in Amsterdam have is,
can I pay my rent or can I pay my mortgage?
Or actually, can I live in
Amsterdam? And the political realities that a donut-friendly framework will face. When people
hear degrowth, they think that sounds like a recession. Growth versus degrowth, carrots
versus sticks, and can the donut prevail? It's coming up right after this.
From Stitcher and Dubner Productions, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Duffner.
I asked Kate Raworth how her ideas about a sustainable global economy differ from the standard economic model she learned years ago as a student at Oxford.
So the standard economics I learned was not based on a delicately balanced living planet.
There wasn't really a planet.
Anything natural was called an environmental externality,
you know, degradation of the air or the water. Environmental externality as if this was just an unbounded space,
kind of blank sheet beyond which so much lies,
and we never need to ask where it comes to an end.
And the shape of progress that we're told in theory of 20th century economic thinking
is never-ending growth.
So we start on a delicately balanced living planet and then ask ourselves,
how do we create economies that are compatible with Earth's capacity
to regenerate resources and absorb our wastes?
How do we live in harmony with that?
And that's completely different to any macroeconomic thinking, which just presumes growth is good.
In some countries over the past, well, really quite a long time, a great amount of policy has been established by economists and economic thinking.
As you write, economics is the mother tongue of public policy.
Can you give me some examples of what you see as the worst manifestations of this privilege enjoyed by economists in policymaking?
Well, it's manifested in speeches of politicians who stand up and just talk national success in sight of the much bigger picture,
the dynamics, the knock-on effects of systems
that just can't get picked up in there.
So I think, you know, at the macro level and the micro level,
we need to release ourselves from these devilish tools
that tie us to very short-termist calculations.
When she worked at the UN,
Raworth was a co-author of the Human Development Report,
whose Human Development Index measures countries
not by economic power,
but by factors like standard of living
and education and life expectancy.
I asked Raworth whether the Human Development Report
really mattered long-term,
or if it was just another important sounding declaration from
just another global institution? I think it's hugely mattered. A simple reflection of it,
the World Bank now reflects all those indicators in its own tables. It's spawned so many other
indexes of human well-being, the index of social progress, people talking about gross national
happiness. I would say,
though, what it's missing is what we've now brought into the picture in the early 21st
century, which is the recognition that you can't just focus on human development,
you have to focus on planetary health at the same time.
Even before COVID-19 crushed GDPs around the world, some people were calling for high-income countries to intentionally reduce their GDPs to pursue what has been labeled prosperity without growth.
Degrowth is specifically about actively scaling down resource use and energy use.
That's Jason Hickel. He is an economic anthropologist in the University of London
system. He researches how different cultures organize their economic systems. Clearly, the objective is to transition our economies to 100%
renewable energy as quickly as possible. But research in ecological economics and in climate
economics is quite clear that that can't be done fast enough while we grow the economy at the same
time. And the reason is because the more you grow the economy, the more energy it requires.
And the more energy it requires, the more difficult it is to supply that energy with renewables. Pickle has also come to think that GDP is a flawed indicator of a country's well-being.
I should actually admit, like, I used to believe these things too. I mean, I've long believed that,
you know, GDP growth is really essential for an economy to function and is essential for
improving well-being and so on. I remember going to a talk by Paul Krugman. This is the middle of the Great
Recession, and he was going on about how America needs to really stimulate an economic recovery
by getting the economy growing again, etc., etc. And I walked out of that thinking, yeah,
that's exactly what we need. And the person I was with on the way home asked, do you think that
America, being one of the richest countries in the entire world, actually needs more GDP?
And at first I was like, of course it does.
I mean, this is essential for the way an economy runs.
But then I realized that I was just basically repeating an idea that I'd heard everyone else always say, and I'd never actually thought through it for myself.
But interestingly, my main defense for GDP growth
was simply that it's important for improving human well-being. What do you do with a country
like Costa Rica that has higher life expectancy than the US, higher happiness indicators than the
US, and yet 80% less GDP per capita, right? Clearly, and ecological economics has demonstrated
this over and over again, past a certain point, which high-income nations have long surpassed, there's actually no fundamental relationship between GDP and human
well-being.
It completely breaks down.
And that, I think, should be a very liberating realization, that we can achieve the heights
of human flourishing and even improve the lives of people in high-income nations without
needing more GDP growth whatsoever.
The downside of a constant growth strategy, Hickel says, is that it inevitably pushes up against what scientists call planetary boundaries.
That is what lies beyond the outer crust of Kate Raworth's donut.
And right now, the planet as a whole is dramatically overshooting planetary boundaries.
But crucially, it's high-income nations that are almost entirely responsible for this. If we were all to consume like the
average person in the rest of the world, then we would be almost entirely within planetary
boundaries. If we were to consume at the rates of the average person in high income nations,
we would be overshooting planetary boundaries by a factor of four or five, which is clearly not a viable development strategy.
So the key thing here, I think, is to recognize that high-income nations
need to actively scale down their use of resources.
And that can be done without harming human well-being at all.
So an easy counter-argument, or a common counter-argument at least,
would be that, well, yes, energy use tied to growth is maybe a core problem. On the other hand,
I could say the technology that is a result of our capitalism produces efficiency, which
theoretically would require less energy, which would theoretically, in the long run, create
opportunities for more growth with less energy, but only if aided by the sort of technology
and innovation that is made possible by capitalism. Yes, and this is a marvelous part of capitalism,
actually. Capitalism constantly produces efficiency improvements. But what's interesting is that
despite rapid improvements in efficiency in terms of resource and energy use,
there has not been an absolute decline in either of those. So we have relative decoupling where GDP rises
faster than resource and energy use. But long term, absolute decoupling has never happened, right?
But I mean, that's partly a function of the fact that so many people around the world are
consuming more energy for the first time, really, right?
Oh, sure. Yeah. But this is true even in high income nations like the USA.
And that's curious, right? Like, we have to ask ourselves, why is that happening? Especially given the fact that the USA has shifted
so dramatically to services. It's important to recognize that we can target the kinds of
technological innovations and efficiency improvements that we want directly without
growing the whole economy indiscriminately and hoping that we get the benefits that we want.
So if your goal is to create more efficient railways or more efficient solar
panels, then why not invest in those objectives directly rather than growing the whole economy?
I can see many people listening to your argument and saying, you know what, this person is
intelligent, has evidence, has logic, has a kind of moral view of humanity that I'm in sync with. And I can see getting on
board with degrowth, at least to a certain degree. And then I can see other constituencies,
many of whom are the entrenched constituencies in government, in industry, in technology,
in academia, and so on, who say, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. This cannot and should
not be allowed or encouraged or even listened to, perhaps. So, who hates these ideas the most? Who
is going to push back the hardest? People are enemies when they misunderstand what we're
talking about. And it can be easy to misunderstand. I admit that. When people hear degrowth,
they think that sounds
like a recession. But here's the thing, is that a recession is what happens when a growth-oriented
economy stops growing. It's a disaster. People lose their jobs, they lose their houses, poverty
rates rise, etc., etc. Degrowth is calling for a shift to a fundamentally different kind of economy
altogether. What I find is that people are actually really interested in this and really ready for this kind of message. I think they realize on some level that the way
we're running the economy right now is not really working for people and certainly not for the living
world in which we depend. And also we're seeing in governments as well. Look at New Zealand,
which has recently abandoned GDP as an objective in their budget. Another misconception people have
is that degrowth sounds like austerity, right? But in fact, it's again the opposite. Austerity is a politics that's organized around
cutting public services, cutting wages in order to get growth going again. And degrowth calls for
investment in public services and a fair distribution of existing income to ensure
that growth is not necessary for human flourishing. And so I think that it's really a matter of communication.
Yeah, I don't use that word.
Kate Raworth again, and the word she doesn't use is degrowth.
I find every time I've ever been in or listened to a debate with it,
people get confused about what we're talking about.
So I am advocating a global economy that is regenerative by design,
works within the cycles of the living
world, and that is distributive by design, shares value far more equitably with everyone who's
co-creating it. So I would rather talk about what we're for, the dynamics we're trying to create,
rather than focus on what we're trying to move away from. And I find myself not using the word
degrowth. I find that if you generally take it to a public, people think, oh, you're trying to make the economy go down and they misunderstand it.
And I don't want people to misunderstand the debate.
I want people to be inspired by the direction we want to go in.
So I'll talk about doughnuts instead.
We've seen the emergence in the last couple of years of a small group of governments actually saying, you know, we're never going to be the country with the biggest or the fastest GDP growth.
So let's go and do something more interesting. And they're
called the Wellbeing Governments Alliance. You've got New Zealand, Scotland, Iceland,
starting to do something more interesting. I think that is very powerful and fascinating.
And they just all happen to have women as prime ministers.
You know, it does strike me, GDP has been around for a long time.
And almost since the beginning,
people have warned of, you know,
an over-reliance on it,
that it measures something
and leaves out a lot of things.
In fact, you know,
the person credited with inventing it,
Simon Kuznets,
warned against an over-reliance of it.
It does seem in the last, you know,
few decades,
there's more voice raised against it. And many of the most prominent voices are women. So I think of people like yourself, certainly Mariana Mazzucato. I think of the philosopher Martha Nussbaum. Do you think that's a coincidence? professional lives, know that their life has always been balanced with managing their personal
lives. So, you know, recognizing that economic theory was predominantly, well, not even predominantly,
just written by men until almost this last century, it focused on the market and the state,
the spaces of monetized interaction. And it took feminist economists coming along from the 1960s
and 70s to say, hello, there is the household.
It's actually the core economy on which everything depends.
There is the commons where people get together and co-create goods and services they value in communities. And wow, the last months have really highlighted the importance of that.
So I'm not surprised that female leaders in nations are more likely to see the importance of that in the balance of well-being for the nation as a whole. So, you know, if we think about China now, for decades, they pursued a socialist
communist agenda that, you know, killed millions and kept many more millions dreadfully poor.
And for China, it was the pursuit of economic growth, of GDP growth, as much as one might
challenge the methodology of their growth in particular, but that alleviated poverty. So what do you say about or to the millions of Chinese who've
benefited from that growth? How can they find sucker in your argument that GDP growth per se
is dangerous? So I don't think I've ever said GDP growth per se is dangerous. What I believe
is dangerous is that we have economic systems that are
structurally dependent on endless growth. So there are many countries in the world that I believe
absolutely need economic growth. I'm thinking of Zanzibar, I'm thinking of low income economies,
where people are in the hole in the donut. They can't meet their needs for food and water and
healthcare and housing and education. And as the economy grows, if that growth is reinvested in the right places, it will meet those fundamental human needs. But
there has to come a point at which nations grow up. Let's imagine that some years from now that
90% of the world's nations have signed on to your notion of planetary boundaries and decided that, you know what,
we need responsible and sustainable growth, and we will do it in concert with giving people
their basic needs, keeping them out of the hole in the donut. But only 90% do it. And within that
10% are, let's just pick Russia and Saudi Arabia and Iran, just to pick a few, who feel that, you
know, now there's an arbitrage opportunity. If everybody else is dialing back, well, that makes it that much easier for us to
keep going forward, to ignore those boundaries. So you worked at the UN. You know that there are
sometimes signs of global unity and collaboration, but it's mostly hand-waving and signaling, and that really
countries are out for themselves. So are you concerned that this may become a kind of,
not an arms race quite, but even if the right-minded countries go along and pursue
this more sustainable economy, that rival nations will have an even wider avenue to pursue their
agendas?
Well, I don't know that it's true that all nations are out for themselves. That's like telling us, you know, rationally economic man is self-interested and then we become that.
And if all nations are out for themselves, forget it. Because we live on one delicately
balanced planet and we share her life-supporting systems and we will blow right past them and then no nation can help itself
because we've destroyed the commonwealth, a stable climate and fertile soils and healthy oceans that
every nation depends upon. My strategy is I don't try to push the donut on anyone. I have never
knocked on a shut door because there is so much energy
for transformation in the world that I just go where the energy is.
After the break, we visit a city that has flung its doors wide open to Raworth and her donut plan.
If you only wait for the others to start, then nobody will ever move.
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I think you will admire it very much.
We'll be right back.
Kate Raworth's book, Donut Economics, is essentially an alarm,
a warning that the blind pursuit of economic growth leaves out too many people
and puts too much strain on the planet's resources.
But some policymakers who read the book wanted more practical ideas.
So Raworth has been busy setting up a donut economics action lab to create
customized blueprints for communities in pursuit of sustainable growth. They're very much bespoke
portraits for those cities. She's already created these city portraits for Philadelphia and Portland,
Oregon. This is a very hard look in the mirror of the 21st century reality. How do we actually create more social
equity for the most deprived neighborhoods in our city and cut our carbon emissions at the same time?
How do we transform diets in our city and improve water quality and improve green roofs and have
more green trees in the poorest neighborhoods? There's one city that has embraced the donut
philosophy more aggressively than any other. Hi, my name is Marike van Doornink. I'm deputy green trees in the poorest neighborhoods. There's one city that has embraced the donut philosophy
more aggressively than any other.
Hi, my name is Marike van Dornink.
I'm deputy mayor for the city of Amsterdam.
Van Dornink's prime responsibilities
are urban development and sustainability.
Which has to do with the energy transition,
but also circular economy.
What exactly is a circular economy?
Well, that's the million dollar question.
The economic anthropologist Jason Hickel again.
So the way that the Amsterdam plan is going to approach it is to maximize recyclability and minimize the extraction of new resources.
A lot of people are fed up with this kind of we throw away everything, like this disposable society that we have created.
Van Dornick belongs to Amsterdam's Green Left Party, which is, well, which is pretty much what it sounds like.
They came to power in 2018.
In April of 2020, Kate Raworth and Amsterdam officials announced that the city had formally implemented a version of Raworth's donutut Plan, focusing on Amsterdam's pain points,
their especially high housing prices and high carbon emissions. But the Donut Plan was part of a broader strategy Amsterdam has been working on for years, to have a completely circular economy
by the year 2050. That means by 2030, the city's use of primary materials must be half what it is
today.
This lines up with a similar plan the Dutch federal government has in place.
I have to say, when I first read about Amsterdam and the donut plan,
I was surprised mostly because if I think of cities around the world that don't need the donut plan, I would think of Amsterdam. When I think of a
progressive view towards sustainability, toward energy, toward transportation, toward housing,
we Americans think of you, maybe not Amsterdam per se, but you're part of the world certainly
as much more of a model than us. But plainly, you feel there's an enormous amount of progress
that needs to be made still, yes, on all those fronts?
Yes, a lot of progress needs to be made.
Only if you look at the climate crisis that we're in right now, it demands much more drastic solutions.
And if you're not very careful, it will be on the shoulders of the people who are already in a social disadvantage situation. For example, if we tax the gas or the oil much more,
which is good in order to stop climate change,
it will not benefit people with lower incomes.
We don't have huge differences in income,
a bit more than we used to, but it's there.
I think where we're doing bad is that the prices of our houses are far too high.
The biggest worry that people in
Amsterdam have is, can I pay my rent or can I pay my mortgage? Or actually, can I live in Amsterdam
because it's so expensive? And that is such a strange thing because we calculate our GDP,
so how wealthy the city is, by the prices of our houses. So we say, okay, we have very expensive
houses, so we are doing well,
we're a rich city. But actually we're saying there's no access for a lot of young people,
but also older people, because it's far too expensive. So how could we say that our city
is doing well? Yet another way in which GDP is not a very useful measure sometimes, yes?
It's not. It's not. It actually shows inequality. So what is Amsterdam doing about affordability, but affordability in concert with the sustainability and ecological goals?
Well, we have to build more houses. That's not something that we can solve overnight.
But there's two things that we're doing in Amsterdam.
And one of the things is that when we have new development, we always say that 40%
needs to be affordable housing. So there's a fixed price that maximum rent can be asked.
Then 40% has to be middle income and only 20% can be free markets. So that's how we try to
keep houses affordable. But at the same time, of course, it needs to be sustainable. So we have
quite high standards for building companies who want to build in Amsterdam when it comes to energy use, when it comes to materials that they use, the kind of circularity that they put into their buildings.
For example, you build a house for a larger family and later on, you know, their smaller families want to live there. So you can easily adjust them. Or you have buildings that were built to be a school,
but after 20, 30 years, there will be less children in the neighborhood
and you can easily adapt that building into a new one.
So you don't have to demolish, you can just adapt it.
That's the very important circular method that we're using.
I was surprised to see that CO2 emissions in the Netherlands
aren't much lower today than
in 1990. Again, only because I, perhaps wrongly, think of Amsterdam and the Netherlands as pretty
progressive when it comes to clean energy and pollution and so on. Amsterdam has grown immensely
since 1990. So actually, the fact that we have about the same as we had in 1990 says that we already done good
but in order to really make the breakthrough we have to speed things up and we couldn't do that
by windmills and by solar but it's not enough one of the things that we really have to do
is to look at production mechanisms or production methods that actually cost much less energy. The energy transition is not only about using green fuels instead of fossil fuels,
and then it's over.
We really have to change our behavior.
Are you talking about simply less consumption?
Or when you talk about different mechanisms,
are you talking about a different way to produce goods,
a different way to transport goods,
a realignment of basically that whole
supply chain and production chain?
I think it's both.
I think we have to consume less.
We have so much stuff that actually is made to be broken instead of made to last.
And I think most people are fed up with that.
But we also have to do things differently.
So, for example, for transport, how can we have much more emission-free transport or different kind of transport?
How can we, for example, use the water much more for transport than we're using our roads?
And with the COVID crisis next to the climate crisis, we see that we have to look at much shorter supply chains.
Meaning producing more locally or nationally than importing, yes,
essentially? Yes, and much more using already existing resources instead of mining all these
new raw materials, shipping them all over the world and make new things and then throw it away
and have a huge waste crisis. While there's inevitably waste in what you describe, there
are a lot of efficiencies in that because you're transporting things in massive quantities. The flip side is if you were to try to manufacture more things locally or nationally, then there are inefficiencies in that because, you know, the Netherlands isn't as good at everything as, you know, it might like to be. So I am curious whether you feel
that you're taking steps
toward a kind of degrowth mindset?
I don't think degrowth is a goal,
but growth is also not a goal.
So the whole idea is much more
of being a thriving city,
a city that is taking well care
of its inhabitants,
but also taking well care
of its environment
and taking well care of the rest
of the world. Because if we ship all these products from other parts of the world, we have no clue
what the labor conditions are. Well, actually, we do have a clue what the conditions are.
They are very bad. It's just quite easy to turn our heads and don't see it. But we know that the products that we use quite often are causing
labor exploitation, but also pollution in other parts of the world. And we can't pretend we don't
know, because we do. Can you give a specific example of how your plan might encourage the
reuse or recycling of something like used clothing, or maybe it's even something a little
bit more disgusting than that, medical waste or electronic waste. I do think a lot of people are
interested in reusing or recreating or recycling things. But right now it's quite difficult because
it's still cheaper to, you know, dig the mines and get all the raw materials from other parts of the world to the
Netherlands, that's cheaper for a producer than to actually recycle. So we need this incentive
to make recycling and reusing and recreating much more interesting for a producer than raw mining.
One of the things that we need to do is completely change our tax system. Right now, we do have low taxes on primary resources,
and we have very high taxes on labor. And actually, the circular economy is very labor-intensive,
because all this, you know, reusing, recycling, you know, taking things apart and then making
new things is very labor-intensive. And so I do think that by showing that using things again is not only
saving the earth, but it's also creating lots of employment, which at this moment is because of
COVID, a big problem in Amsterdam. Amsterdam has an economy which is highly dependent on tourists.
If the economy goes well, our economy goes well. But also if it goes bad, it goes very bad in Amsterdam.
So actually what we need to have is a much more resilient economy,
which actually a circular economy is much more resilient than a linear.
For example, right now we are working on a new policy on data centers
because they use enormous amounts of energy.
But they want to be in Amsterdam because it's a hub.
So we said, okay, you can be here, but you can only use green energy. The heat water that you
have as a waste product from your cooling systems, you have to provide that for free
in order for us to change our heating system in houses so we can exchange gas
by this hot water that comes from the cooling system.
Oh, so you use geothermal from the data centers. Their waste product is your heat source.
Exactly. And we also ask them to have good architecture, because quite often data centers
are like black boxes somewhere. So let me propose an unintended consequence of your
well-meaning policy.
Let's say you go to these big data centers and say, if you're going to be here, you need to use green energy, construct better buildings, reuse your waste, etc., etc. And at a certain
point, they say, you know what, you are making it too expensive and difficult for us to be here.
We're going to move to a different province 50 miles away, and there we can pollute all we want because they don't have
the Green Party in power. Well, of course, that could happen. And actually, it's something that
some of the companies tell me. So they say, well, do you want me to stay here or do you want me to
go to somewhere else where I can really, really pollute? And I say, do you want to be a company
that really pollutes or do you want to be part of of the solution? So no, I don't have all the instruments to force
companies to do so. But if you want to be in a city like Amsterdam, which is an attractive city,
which a lot of companies want to be because they can also provide their employees a nice work
environment, a green city, a friendly city. And this is the way we do it.
So, yes, we're maybe trying to work with the coalition of the willing.
But I do think the willing could be an example for others.
You personally sound like you really appreciate the value of the carrot
as opposed to the stick, or at least as many carrots as possible.
I am curious, have you found industries or instances
yet where you think that the stick will be much more necessary? Oh, yes, absolutely. I do think
that we have to have much higher CO2 taxes. I think we need to keep producers much more
responsible for what they're making. So I think we should actually forbid a company to make a
machine that if one little thing is broken that you have to throw it away. I think we should make
it compulsory that something can be repaired. Say the right to repair instead of the right to buy.
Also in plastics, you know, quite often plastics are very hard to recycle because in just one
little whatever cup, they use three different plastics, which actually
cannot be taken apart in the recycling circle. So I do think that we need to hold companies
responsible for how they make their products. So Amsterdam could go to zero carbon emissions in
five years, and that doesn't affect at all what, let's say, India or China do. So I realize this is not your
job per se, but I am curious to know how Amsterdam feels being a citizen of the world,
but knowing that even if you achieve your solutions across the board, not just with
climate and pollution, but sustainability, housing, reusing, etc., etc. What part that may play in the global march toward those sort of solutions?
Well, if you only wait for the others to start, then nobody will ever move.
And I know that there's many countries in the world and many cities in the world who
really want to make change, also cities within the United States of America.
So I do think as a city who
puts a huge ecological footprint on the world, because we are a rich city, and we use enormous
amounts of fossil fuels, and we use enormous amounts of consumer goods that pollute the world
by its waste, but also by the way it's being produced, we do have a responsibility. Let me ask you finally, your plan is plainly dependent on social cohesion, right? People
need to understand that you're kind of all in this together. And again, as Americans,
we think of Amsterdam and the Netherlands and much of Northern Europe as places where social
cohesion and social trust are fairly high,
certainly much higher than they are in the U.S. right now. So, I'm curious whether or how
you think this kind of approach could work in the U.S., where the society is different,
the economy is different, the relationship between the individual and the state is very different.
And I'm curious if you have any advice for us. Well, Amsterdam and the Netherlands and Western
Europe has a much more history of a welfare system. And I think Americans are much more
self-reliant. And some parts of a circular economy are quite self-reliant because with the stuff that
you have, you can make yourself new things or your neighbor could do that but at the same time you could provide other services to your neighbor for me
the circular economy is about thinking globally but acting locally what would a neighborhood be
like if actually you can produce your own energy and you can exchange it with others and create
these small grids where you don't need the big companies anymore,
which would be complete democratization of the energy supply.
And I think it would take the entrepreneurship that a lot of Americans have
on a smaller scale.
I think America could do that.
Maybe even better than Western Europe,
because you are people who like to take care of themselves.
Ah, flattery. Yes, we are all susceptible. Thanks to Marika Van Dornick for speaking with us from
Amsterdam today. Also, thanks to Kate Raworth and Jason Hickel, both speaking to us from England.
We will keep our eye on Amsterdam's efforts to embrace the donut, and we'll report back if we
learn anything
particularly interesting. We have got a lot of interesting episodes in different stages of
production, many of them showing how the world is changing directly and indirectly because of
COVID-19. In the coming weeks, you'll hear about the economics of vaccine development, the economics
of noise, and the fate of the insurance industry.
Let us know what else you'd like to hear about.
We are at radio at Freakonomics.com.
We will be back next week.
Until then, take care of yourself, and if you can, someone else too.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Dubner Productions.
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As always, thanks for listening.
But if you had to sit down, let's say, with Vladimir Putin to pitch the donut economics idea, how well do you think it would go over right now?
I would just give Vladimir a donut and say, come and think about the health of your people.
You depend upon a healthy planet.
This is, that's a terrible answer.
I don't.
Okay.